Ceph
PLEASE NOTE: This document applies to v1.2 version and not to the latest stable release v1.9
YugabyteDB operator Quikstart
YugaByte DB is a high-performance distributed SQL database (more information here). Rook provides an operator that can create and manage YugabyteDB clusters.
Prerequisites
Follow these instructions to make your kubernetes cluster ready for Rook
.
TL;DR
You can create a simple YugabyteDB cluster with below commands. For more detailed instructions, please skip to the Deploy Rook YugabyteDB Operator section.
cd cluster/examples/kubernetes/yugabytedb
kubectl create -f operator.yaml
kubectl create -f cluster.yaml
Use below commands to observe the created cluster.
kubectl -n rook-yugabytedb-system get pods
Deploy Rook YugabyteDB Operator
To begin with, deploy the Rook YugabyteDB operator, which can create/manage the YugabyteDB cluster. Use following commands to do the same.
cd cluster/examples/kubernetes/yugabytedb
kubectl create -f operator.yaml
Observe the rook operator using below command.
kubectl -n rook-yugabytedb-system get pods
Create a simple YugabyteDB cluster
After the Rook YugabyteDB operator is up and running, you can create an object of the custom resource type ybclusters.yugabytedb.rook.io
. A sample resource specs are present in cluster.yaml
. You can also browse/modify the contents of cluster.yaml
according to the configuration options available. Refer YugabyteDB CRD documentation for details on available configuration options.
To create a YugabyteDB cluster, run
kubectl create -f cluster.yaml
Verify the created custom resource object using
kubectl -n rook-yugabytedb get ybclusters.yugabytedb.rook.io
Check if the required replicas of Master & TServer are running, run the following command. Tally the Master & TServer pod count against the corresponding replica count you have in cluster.yaml
. With no change to the replica count, you should see 3 pods each for Master & TServer.
kubectl -n rook-yugabytedb get pods
Troubleshooting
Skip this section, if the cluster is up & running. Continue to the Access the Database section to access ysql
api.
If the cluster does not come up, first run following command to take a look at operator logs.
kubectl -n rook-yugabytedb-system logs -l app=rook-yugabytedb-operator
If everything is OK in the operator logs, check the YugabyteDB Master & TServer logs next.
kubectl -n rook-yugabytedb logs -l app=yb-master-hello-ybdb-cluster
kubectl -n rook-yugabytedb logs -l app=yb-tserver-hello-ybdb-cluster
Access the Database
After all the pods in YugabyteDB cluster are running, you can access the YugabyteDB’s postgres compliant ysql
api. Run following command to access it.
kubectl -n rook-yugabytedb exec -it yb-tserver-hello-ybdb-cluster-0 /home/yugabyte/bin/ysqlsh -- -h yb-tserver-hello-ybdb-cluster-0 --echo-queries
Refer the YugabyteDB documentation for more details on the ysql
api.
You can also access the YugabyteDB dashboard using port-forwarding.
kubectl port-forward -n rook-yugabytedb svc/yb-master-ui-hello-ybdb-cluster 7000:7000
NOTE: You should now be able to navigate to
127.0.0.1:7000
to visualize your cluster.
Cleanup
Run the commands below to clean up all resources created above.
NOTE: This will destroy your database and delete all of its data.
kubectl delete -f cluster.yaml
kubectl delete -f operator.yaml
Manually delete any Persistent Volumes that were created for this YugabyteDB cluster.