Aiven Operator
Provision and manage Aiven Services from your Kubernetes cluster.
See the full documentation here.
Installation
To install the Operator, please follow the installation instructions.
Deploying PostgreSQL at Aiven
Now let's create a PostgreSQL
resource with the following YAML – please fill in your project name under in the project
field:
apiVersion: aiven.io/v1alpha1
kind: PostgreSQL
metadata:
name: aiven-pg
spec:
# reads the authentication token
authSecretRef:
name: aiven-token
key: token
# stores the PostgreSQL connection information on the specified Secret
connInfoSecretTarget:
name: pg-connection
project: <your-project-name>
cloudName: google-europe-west1
plan: hobbyist
maintenanceWindowDow: friday
maintenanceWindowTime: 23:00:00
userConfig:
pg_version: "15"
Watch the resource being created and wait until its status is RUNNING
:
watch kubectl get postgresql.aiven.io aiven-pg
After created, the Operator will create a Kubernetes Secret containing the PostgreSQL connection information:
kubectl describe secret pg-connection
Use the following jq command to decode the Secret:
kubectl get secret pg-connection -o json | jq '.data | map_values(@base64d)'
Connecting to PostgreSQL
Let's run a psql
command to test the database connection using the generated Secret:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: psql-test-connection
spec:
restartPolicy: Never
containers:
- image: postgres:11
name: postgres
command: ["psql", "$(DATABASE_URI)", "-c", "SELECT version();"]
envFrom:
- secretRef:
name: pg-connection
The Pod should the PostgreSQL version. You can verify with the following command:
$ kubectl logs psql-test-connection
version
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PostgreSQL 11.12 on x86_64-pc-linux-gnu, compiled by gcc, a 68c5366192 p 6b9244f01a, 64-bit
(1 row)
Contributing
We welcome and encourage contributions to this project. Please take a look at our Contribution guide line.
License
Apache 2.