postgres-operator
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postgres-operator
- No disk space crashloop but pod healthy · Issue #3788 · CrunchyData/postgres-operator
- Deploying Postgres on Kubernetes in production
- Anyone using cloudnativepg in production?
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Jolt v0.5.2 is available!
As for the Operators, I've been using Crunchy PGO, which is very high quality, and one of the most widely used. You can install it via Helm, or via OLM from OperatorHub. There are other good ones as well, but none that I have experience with. The only issue I've run into so far is I've had to disable TLS on the database cluster, as Prowlarr refused to connect with it for some reason (Radarr was fine). I still need to open an issue with the Prowlarr team about that, but I might switch to a service mesh for TLS anyway.
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Can someone share experience configuring Highly Available PgSQL?
The Crunchy operator, seemingly like most (if not all) of the other Postgres operators (Zalando, KubeDB, and StackGres, etc.), is essentially a wrapper for Patroni. IMO if someone wanted a Patroni cluster, they would just build one. The point of an operator is to manage the cluster resources and node relationships, so why not have it take the role Patroni is filling here? It's already reaching into the nodes, obtaining status, managing the routing, etc., so why add the extra layer?
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Questions about Kubernetes
On the topic of Postgres, you should look into an operator or Helm chart that can setup common things (like replication and auto-failover), such as Crunchy's Postgres operator, or consider using a "cloud-native" distributed database like CockroachDB (disclaimer: I am a Cockroach Labs employee) which has its own operator as well. Another word of warning, running stateful services, particularly mission critical databases, can require a lot of maintenance work (it's my full-time job), so unless this is for a hobby project, I would highly recommend you look into using a managed database offerring. Every major cloud provider and most database companies have one.
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My girlfriend left me... I have a K8S cluster, argocd, longhorn, traefik, metallb, on 3 optiplex mff with proxmox... This is the start gentlemen, i'll post back in 1 year. This dashboard will be full my friends, I promise, see you in the rabbit hole o/
For postgres you can also have a look at PGO or bitnami helm chart
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Databases on Kubernetes is fundamentally same as a database on a VM
Let's say a new Kubernetes version comes out in April. In November, as everything works perfectly well, you decide to install a Postgres operator on it. Bummer, it doesn't work. It's not a huge issue, you just wait until the bug is resolved (already done[0]), but it's just one of these tiny things that I don't get when running Postrges natively. And I'm saying this as a big fan of Crunchy Data running some production loads on it without a failure for quite some time now.
[0] https://github.com/CrunchyData/postgres-operator/issues/3476
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Are you running databases on Kubernetes?
There is one particular client that have a somewhat big database 40-120gb (it change size over the year), and for that we used CrunchyData Postgres operator ( https://access.crunchydata.com/documentation/postgres-operator/v5/ ) we have no commercial relation with them, but oboi let me tell you the god send that thing is, this database in specific process massive data and it is distributed between several nodes in a read-write and read-only set, and let me tell you, it is amazing how easy it is to move things around, take backups, increase the capacity and a bunch of other goodies that operator bring. Give it a try.
- Do people use DBs as Pods?
homepage
- Highly customizable homepage with Docker and service API integrations
- Homepage JDownloader widget
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Just started building a home server in my Raspberry Pi 3B+
It's Homepage. It's great for dashboarding, but has a few shortcomings in that you need to secure it behind a reverse proxy, otherwise you'll end up leaking credentials to the whole internet, unless you abstain from using its "connectors".
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Just started homelabbing in an old Raspberry Pi 3B+
I use dietpi as os, the dash board is from homepage
- Bookmark manager with a focus on organization?
- Is there a dashboard to list the services I have running?
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Dashboard for monitoring
I use Homepage. Has integrations with nearly every service I use and it's pretty easy to set up
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Setting up a local domain
Step 2. Build a Dashboard. There are many options for personal dashboards, but I run Ben Phelps' Homepage in a Docker container. It is fast and simple to configure with YAML files. Here is a screenshot of my home dashboard. Homepage has more features than I use. Any ports needed for your services will be added to the URLs in the Homepage config file. Then, all you need to do is create a bookmark to Homepage in your partner's browser.
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It's dashboard Wednesday! And I'm finally content with how mine looks;)
Good to see a dashboard post here that isnt just using Homepage :)
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What kind of Alpine user are you?
The control panel is called Homepage. I like it more than Heimdall. To manage Docker I use Portainer.
What are some alternatives?
kubegres - Kubegres is a Kubernetes operator allowing to deploy one or many clusters of PostgreSql instances and manage databases replication, failover and backup.
Heimdall - An Application dashboard and launcher
postgres-operator - Postgres operator creates and manages PostgreSQL clusters running in Kubernetes
homer-dashboard
longhorn - Cloud-Native distributed storage built on and for Kubernetes
Organizr - HTPC/Homelab Services Organizer - Written in PHP
postgres-operator - Production PostgreSQL for Kubernetes, from high availability Postgres clusters to full-scale database-as-a-service.
homarr - Customizable browser's home page to interact with your homeserver's Docker containers (e.g. Sonarr/Radarr)
cloudnative-pg - CloudNativePG is a comprehensive platform designed to seamlessly manage PostgreSQL databases within Kubernetes environments, covering the entire operational lifecycle from initial deployment to ongoing maintenance
Portainer - Making Docker and Kubernetes management easy.
k3s - Lightweight Kubernetes
Speedtest-Tracker - Continuously track your internet speed