Patroni
Replica imaging and bootstrap
Patroni allows customizing creation of a new replica. It also supports defining what happens when the new empty cluster is being bootstrapped. The distinction between two is well defined: Patroni creates replicas only if the initialize
key is present in DCS for the cluster. If there is no initialize
key - Patroni calls bootstrap exclusively on the first node that takes the initialize key lock.
Bootstrap
PostgreSQL provides initdb
command to initialize a new cluster and Patroni calls it by default. In certain cases, particularly when creating a new cluster as a copy of an existing one, it is necessary to replace a built-in method with custom actions. Patroni supports executing user-defined scripts to bootstrap new clusters, supplying some required arguments to them, i.e. the name of the cluster and the path to the data directory. This is configured in the bootstrap
section of the Patroni configuration. For example:
bootstrap: method: <custom_bootstrap_method_name> <custom_bootstrap_method_name>: command: <path_to_custom_bootstrap_script> [param1 [, ...]] keep_existing_recovery_conf: False no_params: False recovery_conf: recovery_target_action: promote recovery_target_timeline: latest restore_command: <method_specific_restore_command>
Each bootstrap method must define at least a name
and a command
. A special initdb
method is available to trigger the default behavior, in which case method
parameter can be omitted altogether. The command
can be specified using either an absolute path, or the one relative to the patroni
command location. In addition to the fixed parameters defined in the configuration files, Patroni supplies two cluster-specific ones:
- --scope
-
Name of the cluster to be bootstrapped
- --datadir
-
Path to the data directory of the cluster instance to be bootstrapped
Passing these two additional flags can be disabled by setting a special no_params
parameter to True
.
If the bootstrap script returns 0, Patroni tries to configure and start the PostgreSQL instance produced by it. If any of the intermediate steps fail, or the script returns a non-zero value, Patroni assumes that the bootstrap has failed, cleans up after itself and releases the initialize lock to give another node the opportunity to bootstrap.
If a recovery_conf
block is defined in the same section as the custom bootstrap method, Patroni will generate a recovery.conf
before starting the newly bootstrapped instance. Typically, such recovery.conf should contain at least one of the recovery_target_*
parameters, together with the recovery_target_timeline
set to promote
.
If keep_existing_recovery_conf
is defined and set to True
, Patroni will not remove the existing recovery.conf
file if it exists. This is useful when bootstrapping from a backup with tools like pgBackRest that generate the appropriate recovery.conf
for you.
__\\__ Note
Bootstrap methods are neither chained, nor fallen-back to the default one in case the primary one fails __\\__
Building replicas
Patroni uses tried and proven pg_basebackup
in order to create new replicas. One downside of it is that it requires a running leader node. Another one is the lack of ‘on-the-fly’ compression for the backup data and no built-in cleanup for outdated backup files. Some people prefer other backup solutions, such as WAL-E
, pgBackRest
, Barman
and others, or simply roll their own scripts. In order to accommodate all those use-cases Patroni supports running custom scripts to clone a new replica. Those are configured in the postgresql
configuration block:
postgresql: create_replica_methods: - <method name> <method name>: command: <command name> keep_data: True no_params: True no_leader: 1
example: wal_e
postgresql: create_replica_methods: - wal_e - basebackup wal_e: command: patroni_wale_restore no_leader: 1 envdir: {{WALE_ENV_DIR}} use_iam: 1 basebackup: max-rate: '100M'
example: pgbackrest
postgresql: create_replica_methods: - pgbackrest - basebackup pgbackrest: command: /usr/bin/pgbackrest --stanza=<scope> --delta restore keep_data: True no_params: True basebackup: max-rate: '100M'
The create_replica_methods
defines available replica creation methods and the order of executing them. Patroni will stop on the first one that returns 0. Each method should define a separate section in the configuration file, listing the command to execute and any custom parameters that should be passed to that command. All parameters will be passed in a --name=value
format. Besides user-defined parameters, Patroni supplies a couple of cluster-specific ones:
- --scope
-
Which cluster this replica belongs to
- --datadir
-
Path to the data directory of the replica
- --role
-
Always ‘replica’
- --connstring
-
Connection string to connect to the cluster member to clone from (primary or other replica). The user in the connection string can execute SQL and replication protocol commands.
A special no_leader
parameter, if defined, allows Patroni to call the replica creation method even if there is no running leader or replicas. In that case, an empty string will be passed in a connection string. This is useful for restoring the formerly running cluster from the binary backup.
A special keep_data
parameter, if defined, will instruct Patroni to not clean PGDATA folder before calling restore.
A special no_params
parameter, if defined, restricts passing parameters to custom command.
A basebackup
method is a special case: it will be used if create_replica_methods
is empty, although it is possible to list it explicitly among the create_replica_methods
methods. This method initializes a new replica with the pg_basebackup
, the base backup is taken from the leader unless there are replicas with clonefrom
tag, in which case one of such replicas will be used as the origin for pg_basebackup. It works without any configuration; however, it is possible to specify a basebackup
configuration section. Same rules as with the other method configuration apply, namely, only long (with –) options should be specified there. Not all parameters make sense, if you override a connection string or provide an option to created tar-ed or compressed base backups, patroni won’t be able to make a replica out of it. There is no validation performed on the names or values of the parameters passed to the basebackup
section. Also note that in case symlinks are used for the WAL folder it is up to the user to specify the correct --waldir
path as an option, so that after replica buildup or re-initialization the symlink would persist. This option is supported only since v10 though.
You can specify basebackup parameters as either a map (key-value pairs) or a list of elements, where each element could be either a key-value pair or a single key (for options that does not receive any values, for instance, --verbose
). Consider those 2 examples:
postgresql: basebackup: max-rate: '100M' checkpoint: 'fast'
and
postgresql: basebackup: - verbose - max-rate: '100M' - waldir: /pg-wal-mount/external-waldir
If all replica creation methods fail, Patroni will try again all methods in order during the next event loop cycle.
Standby cluster
Another available option is to run a “standby cluster”, that contains only of standby nodes replicating from some remote node. This type of clusters has:
Standby leader holds and updates a leader lock in DCS. If the leader lock expires, cascade replicas will perform an election to choose another leader from the standbys.
There is no further relationship between the standby cluster and the primary cluster it replicates from, in particular, they must not share the same DCS scope if they use the same DCS. They do not know anything else from each other apart from replication information. Also, the standby cluster is not being displayed in patronictl list or patronictl topology output on the primary cluster.
For the sake of flexibility, you can specify methods of creating a replica and recovery WAL records when a cluster is in the “standby mode” by providing create_replica_methods key in standby_cluster section. It is distinct from creating replicas, when cluster is detached and functions as a normal cluster, which is controlled by create_replica_methods in postgresql section. Both “standby” and “normal” create_replica_methods reference keys in postgresql section.
To configure such cluster you need to specify the section standby_cluster
in a patroni configuration:
bootstrap: dcs: standby_cluster: host: 1.2.3.4 port: 5432 primary_slot_name: patroni create_replica_methods: - basebackup
Note, that these options will be applied only once during cluster bootstrap, and the only way to change them afterwards is through DCS.
Patroni expects to find postgresql.conf or postgresql.conf.backup in PGDATA of the remote primary and will not start if it does not find it after a basebackup. If the remote primary keeps its postgresql.conf elsewhere, it is your responsibility to copy it to PGDATA.
If you use replication slots on the standby cluster, you must also create the corresponding replication slot on the primary cluster. It will not be done automatically by the standby cluster implementation. You can use Patroni’s permanent replication slots feature on the primary cluster to maintain a replication slot with the same name as primary_slot_name
, or its default value if primary_slot_name
is not provided.
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