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This is a fork of the Opscode PostgreSQL cookbook, which as been modified to install PostgresQL 9.1 on ubuntu (10.04) as well as support for synchronous replication and hot standby.

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Description

This is a fork of the Opscode PostgreSQL cookbook, which has been modified extensively.

  • Adds support for PostgresQL 9.1 on Ubuntu 10.04 (Lucid) using a PPA.
  • Adds a recipe to create PostgreSQL user accounts and databases (this particular addition couples this to the database cookbook)
  • Adds support for configuring Hot Standby with Streaming replication (optionally synchronous) in PostgreSQL 9.1

TODO: while hot-standby is configured, there's nothing in postgresql that'll do automated failover if the master dies. Typically, that's accomplished by:

  • touching a trigger file on the standby (it'll then act as a master)
  • using some form of IP failover so the Master's IP address is automatically transferred to the standby
  • some STONITH mechanism for the old master, so it doesn't come back online

None of the above are handled automatically in this cookbook.

Requirements

Platforms

  • Debian, Ubuntu
  • Red Hat/CentOS/Scientific (6.0+ required) - "EL6-family"
  • Fedora
  • SUSE

Note: Hot Standby and Streaming replication are only supported on Debian and Ubuntu.

Cookboooks

Requires Opscode's openssl cookbook for secure password generation, and a C compiler and development headers in order to build the pg RubyGem to provide Ruby bindings so they're available in other cookbooks.

Opscode's build-essential cookbook provides this functionality on Debian, Ubuntu, and EL6-family.

While not required, Opscode's database cookbook contains resources and providers that can interact with a PostgreSQL database. The Opscode postgresqlcookbook is a dependency of database.

Attributes

The following attributes are set based on the platform, see the attributes/default.rb file for default values.

  • node['postgresql']['version'] - version of postgresql to manage
  • node['postgresql']['dir'] - home directory of where postgresql data and configuration lives.
  • node['postgresql']['client']['packages'] - An array of package names that should be installed on "client" systems.
  • node['postgresql']['server']['packages'] - An array of package names that should be installed on "server" systems.

The following attributes are generated in recipe[postgresql::server].

  • node['postgresql']['password']['postgres'] - randomly generated password by the openssl cookbook's library.
  • node['postgresql']['ssl'] - whether to enable SSL (off for version 8.3, true for 8.4 and later).
  • For SSL keys to be automatically generated for you, you need to override node[:postgresql][:ssl_password] (only tested on Ubuntu). This password is the passphrase used for signing the certificates.

The following attributes are used by the setup recipe:

  • node['postgresql']['databag'] - the data bag in which the setup recipe searches for items. Default is postgresql
  • node['postgresql']['setup_items'] - a list of data bag items containing user/database information. See the notes for the setup recipe for the expected format.

There are also a number of other attributes defined that control things such as host based access (pg_hba.conf) and hot standby. A few are listed below, but see attributes/default.rb for more information.

  • node['postgresql']['hba'] - a list of address/method hashes defining the ip address that will be able to connect to PostreSQL

Streaming Replication

The following attributes can be modified to enable and configure streaming replication and for a Master or Standby.

  • default[:postgresql][:listen_addresses]
  • default[:postgresql][:master] - Whether a node is a master. Defaults to false. In this case, replication will not be configured, and the rest of the master settings will be ignored.
  • default[:postgresql][:standby] - Whether a node is a standby. Defaults to false. In this case, replication will not be configured, and the rest of the standby settings will be ignored.

Master Server

  • default[:postgresql][:wal_level] - set to hot_standby to enable Hot standby.
  • default[:postgresql][:max_wal_senders]
  • default[:postgresql][:wal_sender_delay]
  • default[:postgresql][:wal_keep_segments]
  • default[:postgresql][:vacuum_defer_cleanup_age]
  • default[:postgresql][:replication_timeout]
  • default[:postgresql][:synchronous_standby_names] - If you want synchronous replication, this must be a string containing a comma-separated list of node names of the standby servers.
  • default[:postgresql][:standby_ips] - A list of IP addresses for standbys. These MUST be specified in a role.

Standby Servers

  • default[:postgresql][:master_ip] - This MUST Be specified in the role. It lets the standby know how to connect to the master.
  • default[:postgresql][:hot_standby] - set to on to enable hot standby.
  • default[:postgresql][:max_standby_archive_delay]
  • default[:postgresql][:max_standby_streaming_delay]
  • default[:postgresql][:wal_receiver_status_interval]
  • default[:postgresql][:hot_standby_feedback]

Recipes

default

This recipe just includes the postgresql::client recipe, which installs the postgresql client package and required dependencies.

apt_postgresql_ppa

Adds sources for a PosgresSQL 9.1 package for Ubuntu 10.04. NOTE that this recipe should only be used in Ubuntu 10.04. Newer versions of Ubuntu include PostgreSQL 9.1 in their package repository.

To use this, you'll need to specify the PostgreSQL version and dir attributes. For example, add the folloing to your role:

override_attributes(
  :postgresql => {
    :version => "9.1",
    :dir => "/etc/postgresql/9.1/main"  
  }
) 

client

Installs postgresql client packages and development headers during the compile phase.

ruby

NOTE This recipe may not currently work when installing Chef with the "Omnibus" full stack installer on some platforms due to an incompatibility with OpenSSL. See COOK-1406

Install the pg gem under Chef's Ruby environment so it can be used in other recipes.

server

Includes the server_debian or server_redhat recipe to get the appropriate server packages installed and service managed. Also manages the configuration for the server:

  • generates a strong default password (via openssl) for postgres
  • sets the password for postgres
  • manages the pg_hba.conf file.

server_debian

Installs the postgresql server packages, manages the postgresql service and the postgresql.conf file.

server_redhat

Manages the postgres user and group (with UID/GID 26, per RHEL package conventions), installs the postgresql server packages, initializes the database and manages the postgresql service, and manages the postgresql.conf file.

setup

Creates Roles (user account) and Databases from a data bag. See the Usage section for more info.

Resources/Providers

See the database for resources and providers that can be used for managing PostgreSQL users and databases.

Usage

On systems that need to connect to a PostgreSQL database, add to a run list recipe[postgresql] or recipe[postgresql::client].

On systems that should be PostgreSQL servers, use recipe[postgresql::server] in a run list. This recipe does set a password and expect to use it. It performs a node.save when Chef is not running in solo mode. If you're using chef-solo, you'll need to set the attribute node['postgresql']['password']['postgres'] in your node's json_attribs file or in a role.

Streaming Replication/Hot Standby

To set this up, you'd need to:

  1. Bootstrap the Nodes (you've got know know their IP addresses!)
  2. Assign the server recipe to the master and slave nodes to install a standard postgresql server.
  3. Log into the Standby machine and shut down PostgreSQL.
  4. Create the Master/Standby Roles (see below) and apply to each node. * Make sure both nodes have access to each others' PostgreSQL service by adding the appropriate values for the node['postgresql']['hba'] attribute.
  5. Run chef-client on the Master. Wait for it to finish.
  6. Run chef-client on the Standby. It will fail. That's ok. Log into the standby and make sure PostgreSQL is not running.
  7. Log into the master and manually remove /var/lib/postgresql/9.1/main/.initial_transfer_complete, then re-run chef-client (it will again copy the database data directory over to the standby via rsync, so you'll be prompted for a password unless you've got public keys in place... make sure this step works!)
  8. Restart postgresql on the master, then on the standby and run chef-client on both nodes. Check to make sure PostgreSQL's sender and receiver processes are running:
    • Run ps -ef | grep sender on the Master
    • Run ps -ef | grep receiver on the Standby
  9. Subsequent runs of chef-client should work without any errors.

Master Role

To configure a Master server, you would need to create a role that sets the appropriate properties. For example, given that you have a node namded db2 with an ip address of 10.0.0.11, you might create a role similar to the one below:

name "pg_server_master"
description "A PostgreSQL Master"
run_list "recipe[postgresql::server]"

override_attributes(
  :postgresql => {
    :version => "9.1",
    :dir => "/etc/postgresql/9.1/main",
    :master => true,
    :listen_addresses => "*",
    :wal_level => "hot_standby",
    :max_wal_senders => 5,
    :standby_ips => [ "10.0.0.11", ],
    :synchronous_standby_names => ["db2", ], # Omit this if you don't want
                                             # synchronous replication
    :hba => [
        { :method => 'md5', :address => '127.0.0.1/32' },
        { :method => 'md5', :address => '::1/128' },
        { :method => 'md5', :address => '10.0.0.10' },
        { :method => 'md5', :address => '10.0.0.11' },
    ]
  }
)

Standby Role

To configure a Standby, you could create a similar role. Assuming the master was available at an ip address of 10.0.0.10:

name "pg_server_standby"
description "A PostgreSQL Standby"
run_list "recipe[postgresql::server]"

override_attributes(
  :postgresql => {
    :version => "9.1",
    :dir => "/etc/postgresql/9.1/main",
    :standby => true,
    :hot_standby => "on",
    :master_ip => "10.0.0.10",
    :hba => [
        { :method => 'md5', :address => '127.0.0.1/32' },
        { :method => 'md5', :address => '::1/128' },
        { :method => 'md5', :address => '10.0.0.10' },
        { :method => 'md5', :address => '10.0.0.11' },
    ]
  }
)

User/Database Setup

To configure users and databases, create a data bag with the name used in the default[:postgresql][:databag] attribute. Items in this databag will be used to create both PostgreSQL users and databases. The format of each databag item should be similar to the following:

{
   "id": "sample_db_setup",
   "users": [
       {
           "username":"some_user",
           "password":"some_password",
           "superuser": "true",
       }
   ],
   "databases": [
       {
           "name":"some_db",
           "owner":"some_user", 
           "template":"template0",
           "encoding": "UTF8",
           "locale": "en_US.utf8"
       }
   ] 
}

Then, override the node['postgresql']['setup_items'] attribute in a role:

override_attributes(
  :postgresql => {
    :databag     => "postgresql", # databag from which items are fetched
    :setup_items => ["sample_db_setup", ]  # name of item from which
                                           # user/database info is read.
  }
)

License and Author

Author:: Joshua Timberman ([email protected]) Author:: Lamont Granquist ([email protected]) Author:: Brad Montgomery ([email protected])

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at

http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.

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This is a fork of the Opscode PostgreSQL cookbook, which as been modified to install PostgresQL 9.1 on ubuntu (10.04) as well as support for synchronous replication and hot standby.

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