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.