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Chapter 6. Deploying Service Registry storage in a PostgreSQL database
This chapter explains how to install, configure, and manage Service Registry storage in a PostgreSQL database.
Service Registry storage in PostgreSQL is a Technology Preview feature only. Technology Preview features are not supported with Red Hat production service level agreements (SLAs) and might not be functionally complete. Red Hat does not recommend using them in production.
These features provide early access to upcoming product features, enabling customers to test functionality and provide feedback during the development process. For more information about the support scope of Red Hat Technology Preview features, see https://access.redhat.com/support/offerings/techpreview.
Prerequisites
6.1. Installing a PostgreSQL database from the OpenShift OperatorHub
If you do not already have a PostgreSQL database Operator installed, you can install a PostgreSQL Operator on your OpenShift cluster from the OperatorHub. The OperatorHub is available from the OpenShift Container Platform web console and provides an interface for cluster administrators to discover and install Operators. For more details, see the OpenShift documentation.
Prerequisites
- You must have cluster administrator access to an OpenShift cluster.
Procedure
- In the OpenShift Container Platform web console, log in using an account with cluster administrator privileges.
-
Change to the OpenShift project in which Service Registry is installed. For example, from the Project drop-down, select
my-project
. - In the left navigation menu, click Operators > OperatorHub.
-
In the Filter by keyword text box, enter
PostgreSQL
to find an Operator suitable for your environment, for example, Crunchy PostgreSQL for OpenShift or PostgreSQL Operator by Dev4Ddevs.com. - Read the information about the Operator, and click Install to display the Operator subscription page.
Select your subscription settings, for example:
- Update Channel > stable
- Installation Mode > A specific namespace on the cluster > my-project
- Approval Strategy > Manual
Click Install, and wait a few moments until the Operator is ready for use.
ImportantYou must read the documentation from your chosen PostgreSQL Operator for details on how to create and manage your database.
Additional resources
6.2. Configuring Service Registry with PostgreSQL database storage on OpenShift
This section explains how to configure Java Persistence API-based storage for Service Registry on OpenShift using a PostgreSQL database Operator. You can install Service Registry in an existing database or create a new database, depending on your environment. This section shows a simple example using the PostgreSQL Operator by Dev4Ddevs.com.
Prerequisites
- You must have an OpenShift cluster with cluster administrator access.
- You must have already installed Service Registry. See Chapter 4, Installing Service Registry on OpenShift.
- You must have already installed a PostgreSQL Operator on OpenShift. For example, see Section 6.1, “Installing a PostgreSQL database from the OpenShift OperatorHub”.
Procedure
- In the OpenShift Container Platform web console, log in using an account with cluster administrator privileges.
-
Change to the OpenShift project in which Service Registry and your PostgreSQL Operator are installed. For example, from the Project drop-down, select
my-project
. - Create a PostgreSQL database for your Service Registry storage. For example, click Installed Operators > PostgreSQL Operator by Dev4Ddevs.com > Create database > YAML.
Edit the database settings as follows:
-
name
: Change the value toregistry
-
image
: Change the value tocentos/postgresql-10-centos7
-
Edit any other database settings as needed depending on your environment, for example:
apiVersion: postgresql.dev4devs.com/v1alpha1 kind: Database metadata: name: registry namespace: my-project spec: databaseCpu: 30m databaseCpuLimit: 60m databaseMemoryLimit: 512Mi databaseMemoryRequest: 128Mi databaseName: example databaseNameKeyEnvVar: POSTGRESQL_DATABASE databasePassword: postgres databasePasswordKeyEnvVar: POSTGRESQL_PASSWORD databaseStorageRequest: 1Gi databaseUser: postgres databaseUserKeyEnvVar: POSTGRESQL_USER image: centos/postgresql-10-centos7 size: 1
- Click Create Database, and wait until the database is created.
- Click Installed Operators > Red Hat Integration - Service Registry > ApicurioRegistry > Create ApicurioRegistry.
Paste in the following custom resource definition, and edit the values for the database
url
and credentials to match your environment:apiVersion: apicur.io/v1alpha1 kind: ApicurioRegistry metadata: name: example-apicurioregistry spec: configuration: persistence: "jpa" dataSource: url: "jdbc:postgresql://SERVICE_NAME.NAMESPACE.svc:5432/" # e.g. url: "jdbc:postgresql://acid-minimal-cluster.my-project.svc:5432/" userName: "postgres" password: "PASSWORD" # ^ Optional
- Click Create and wait for the Service Registry route to be created on OpenShift.
Click Networking > Route to access the new route for the Service Registry web console. For example:
http://example-apicurioregistry.my-project.my-domain-name.com/
Additional resources
6.3. Backing up Service Registry PostgreSQL storage
When using Java Persistence API storage in a PostgreSQL database, you must ensure that the data stored by Service Registry is backed up regularly.
SQL Dump is a simple procedure that works with any PostgreSQL installation. This uses the pg_dump utility to generate a file with SQL commands that you can use to recreate the database in the same state that it was in at the time of the dump.
pg_dump
is a regular PostgreSQL client application, which you can execute from any remote host that has access to the database. Like any other client, the operations that can perform are limited to the user permissions.
Procedure
Use the
pg_dump
command to redirect the output to a file:$ pg_dump dbname > dumpfile
You can specify the database server that
pg_dump
connects to using the-h host
and-p port
options.You can reduce large dump files using a compression tool, such as gzip, for example:
$ pg_dump dbname | gzip > filename.gz
Additional resources
For details on client authentication, see the PostgreSQL documentation.
6.4. Restoring Service Registry PostgreSQL storage
You can restore SQL Dump files created by pg_dump
using the psql
utility.
Prerequisites
-
You must have already backed up your PostgreSQL datbase using
pg_dump
. See Section 6.3, “Backing up Service Registry PostgreSQL storage”. - All users who own objects or have permissions on objects in the dumped database must already exist.
Procedure
Enter the following command to create the database:
$ createdb -T template0 dbname
Enter the following command to restore the SQL dump
$ psql dbname < dumpfile
- Run ANALYZE on each database so the query optimizer has useful statistics.