grilix / mariadb-operator

🦭 Run and operate MariaDB in a cloud native way

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🦭 mariadb-operator

Run and operate MariaDB in a cloud native way. Declaratively manage your MariaDB using Kubernetes CRDs rather than imperative commands.

Bare minimum installation

This installation flavour provides the minimum resources required to run mariadb-operator in your cluster.

helm repo add mariadb-operator https://mariadb-operator.github.io/mariadb-operator
helm install mariadb-operator mariadb-operator/mariadb-operator

Recommended installation

The recommended installation includes the following features to provide a better user experiende and reliability:

  • Metrics: Leverage prometheus operator to scrape metrics from both the mariadb-operator and the provisioned MariaDB instances.
  • Webhook certificate renewal: Automatic webhook certificate issuance and renewal using cert-manager. By default, a static self-signed certificate is generated.
helm repo add mariadb-operator https://mariadb-operator.github.io/mariadb-operator
helm install mariadb-operator mariadb-operator/mariadb-operator \
  --set metrics.enabled=true --set webhook.certificate.certManager=true

Openshift

The Openshift installation is managed separately in the mariadb-operator-helm repository, which contains a helm based operator that allows you to install mariadb-operator via OLM.

Quickstart

Let's see mariadb-operator🦭 in action! First of all, install the following configuration manifests that will be referenced by the CRDs further:

kubectl apply -f config/samples/config

To start with, let's provision a MariaDB instance:

kubectl apply -f config/samples/mariadb_v1alpha1_mariadb.yaml
kubectl get mariadbs
NAME      READY   STATUS    PRIMARY     AGE
mariadb   True    Running   mariadb-0   3m57s

kubectl get statefulsets
NAME      READY   AGE
mariadb   1/1     2m12s

kubectl get services
NAME         TYPE        CLUSTER-IP      EXTERNAL-IP   PORT(S)             AGE
mariadb      ClusterIP   10.96.235.145   <none>        3306/TCP,9104/TCP   2m17s

Up and running 🚀, we can now create our first logical database and grant access to users:

kubectl apply -f config/samples/mariadb_v1alpha1_database.yaml
kubectl apply -f config/samples/mariadb_v1alpha1_user.yaml
kubectl apply -f config/samples/mariadb_v1alpha1_grant.yaml
kubectl get databases
NAME        READY   STATUS    CHARSET   COLLATE           AGE
data-test   True    Created   utf8      utf8_general_ci   22s

kubectl get users
NAME              READY   STATUS    MAXCONNS   AGE
mariadb-metrics   True    Created   3          19m
user              True    Created   20         29s

kubectl get grants
NAME              READY   STATUS    DATABASE   TABLE   USERNAME          GRANTOPT   AGE
mariadb-metrics   True    Created   *          *       mariadb-metrics   false      19m
user              True    Created   *          *       user              true       36s

At this point, we can run our database initialization scripts:

kubectl apply -f config/samples/sqljobs
kubectl get sqljobs
NAME       COMPLETE   STATUS    MARIADB   AGE
01-users   True       Success   mariadb   2m47s
02-repos   True       Success   mariadb   2m47s
03-stars   True       Success   mariadb   2m47s

kubectl get jobs
NAME                  COMPLETIONS   DURATION   AGE
01-users              1/1           10s        3m23s
02-repos              1/1           11s        3m13s
03-stars-28067562     1/1           10s        106s

kubectl get cronjobs
NAME       SCHEDULE      SUSPEND   ACTIVE   LAST SCHEDULE   AGE
03-stars   */1 * * * *   False     0        57s             2m33s

Now that the database has been initialized, let's take a backup:

kubectl apply -f config/samples/mariadb_v1alpha1_backup_scheduled.yaml

After one minute, the backup should have completed:

kubectl get backups
NAME               COMPLETE   STATUS    MARIADB   AGE
backup-scheduled   True       Success   mariadb   15m

kubectl get cronjobs
NAME               SCHEDULE      SUSPEND   ACTIVE   LAST SCHEDULE   AGE
backup-scheduled   */1 * * * *   False     0        56s             15m

kubectl get jobs
NAME                                    COMPLETIONS   DURATION   AGE
backup-scheduled-27782894               1/1           4s         3m2s

Last but not least, let's provision a second MariaDB instance bootstrapping from the previous backup:

kubectl apply -f config/samples/mariadb_v1alpha1_mariadb_from_backup.yaml
kubectl get mariadbs
NAME                       READY   STATUS    PRIMARY     AGE
mariadb                    True    Running   mariadb-0   30m57s
mariadb-from-backup        True    Running   mariadb-0   85s

kubectl get restores
NAME                                         COMPLETE   STATUS    MARIADB               AGE
bootstrap-restore-mariadb-from-backup        True       Success   mariadb-from-backup   72s

kubectl get jobs
NAME                                         COMPLETIONS   DURATION   AGE
backup                                       1/1           9s         12m
bootstrap-restore-mariadb-from-backup        1/1           5s         84s

You can take a look at the whole suite of example CRDs available in config/samples.

GitOps

You can configure mariadb-operator's CRDs in your git repo and reconcile them using your favorite GitOps tool, see an example with flux:

Roadmap

Take a look at our 🛣️ roadmap and feel free to open an issue to suggest new features.

Contributing

If you want to report a 🐛 or you think something can be improved, please check our contributing guide and take a look at our open issues. PRs are welcome!

Get in touch

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🦭 Run and operate MariaDB in a cloud native way

License:MIT License


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