Appendix A - Common object stores for backups
You can store the backup files in any service that is supported by the Barman Cloud infrastructure. That is:
You can also use any compatible implementation of the supported services.
The required setup depends on the chosen storage provider and is discussed in the following sections.
AWS S3
AWS Simple Storage Service (S3) is a very popular object storage service offered by Amazon.
As far as CloudNativePG backup is concerned, you can define the permissions to store backups in S3 buckets in two ways:
- If CloudNativePG is running in EKS. you may want to use the IRSA authentication method
- Alternatively, you can use the
ACCESS_KEY_ID
andACCESS_SECRET_KEY
credentials
AWS Access key
You will need the following information about your environment:
-
ACCESS_KEY_ID
: the ID of the access key that will be used to upload files into S3 -
ACCESS_SECRET_KEY
: the secret part of the access key mentioned above -
ACCESS_SESSION_TOKEN
: the optional session token, in case it is required
The access key used must have permission to upload files into the bucket. Given that, you must create a Kubernetes secret with the credentials, and you can do that with the following command:
kubectl create secret generic aws-creds \
--from-literal=ACCESS_KEY_ID=<access key here> \
--from-literal=ACCESS_SECRET_KEY=<secret key here>
# --from-literal=ACCESS_SESSION_TOKEN=<session token here> # if required
The credentials will be stored inside Kubernetes and will be encrypted if encryption at rest is configured in your installation.
Once that secret has been created, you can configure your cluster like in the following example:
apiVersion: postgresql.cnpg.io/v1
kind: Cluster
[...]
spec:
backup:
barmanObjectStore:
destinationPath: "<destination path here>"
s3Credentials:
accessKeyId:
name: aws-creds
key: ACCESS_KEY_ID
secretAccessKey:
name: aws-creds
key: ACCESS_SECRET_KEY
The destination path can be any URL pointing to a folder where
the instance can upload the WAL files, e.g.
s3://BUCKET_NAME/path/to/folder
.
IAM Role for Service Account (IRSA)
In order to use IRSA you need to set an annotation
in the ServiceAccount
of
the Postgres cluster.
We can configure CloudNativePG to inject them using the serviceAccountTemplate
stanza:
apiVersion: postgresql.cnpg.io/v1
kind: Cluster
metadata:
[...]
spec:
serviceAccountTemplate:
metadata:
annotations:
eks.amazonaws.com/role-arn: arn:[...]
[...]
S3 lifecycle policy
Barman Cloud writes objects to S3, then does not update them until they are deleted by the Barman Cloud retention policy. A recommended approach for an S3 lifecycle policy is to expire the current version of objects a few days longer than the Barman retention policy, enable object versioning, and expire non-current versions after a number of days. Such a policy protects against accidental deletion, and also allows for restricting permissions to the CloudNativePG workload so that it may delete objects from S3 without granting permissions to permanently delete objects.
Other S3-compatible Object Storages providers
In case you're using S3-compatible object storage, like MinIO or Linode Object Storage, you can specify an endpoint instead of using the default S3 one.
In this example, it will use the bucket
of Linode in the region
us-east1
.
apiVersion: postgresql.cnpg.io/v1
kind: Cluster
[...]
spec:
backup:
barmanObjectStore:
destinationPath: "s3://bucket/"
endpointURL: "https://us-east1.linodeobjects.com"
s3Credentials:
[...]
In case you're using Digital Ocean Spaces, you will have to use the Path-style syntax.
In this example, it will use the bucket
from Digital Ocean Spaces in the region SFO3
.
apiVersion: postgresql.cnpg.io/v1
kind: Cluster
[...]
spec:
backup:
barmanObjectStore:
destinationPath: "s3://[your-bucket-name]/[your-backup-folder]/"
endpointURL: "https://sfo3.digitaloceanspaces.com"
s3Credentials:
[...]
Important
Suppose you configure an Object Storage provider which uses a certificate signed with a private CA,
like when using MinIO via HTTPS. In that case, you need to set the option endpointCA
referring to a secret containing the CA bundle so that Barman can verify the certificate correctly.
Note
If you want ConfigMaps and Secrets to be automatically reloaded by instances, you can
add a label with key cnpg.io/reload
to the Secrets/ConfigMaps. Otherwise, you will have to reload
the instances using the kubectl cnpg reload
subcommand.
Azure Blob Storage
Azure Blob Storage is the obect storage service provided by Microsoft.
In order to access your storage account for backup and recovery of CloudNativePG managed databases, you will need one of the following combinations of credentials:
- Connection String
- Storage account name and Storage account access key
- Storage account name and Storage account SAS Token
- Storage account name and Azure AD Workload Identity properly configured.
Using Azure AD Workload Identity, you can avoid saving the credentials into a Kubernetes Secret,
and have a Cluster configuration adding the inheritFromAzureAD
as follows:
apiVersion: postgresql.cnpg.io/v1
kind: Cluster
[...]
spec:
backup:
barmanObjectStore:
destinationPath: "<destination path here>"
azureCredentials:
inheritFromAzureAD: true
On the other side, using both Storage account access key or Storage account SAS Token, the credentials need to be stored inside a Kubernetes Secret, adding data entries only when needed. The following command performs that:
kubectl create secret generic azure-creds \
--from-literal=AZURE_STORAGE_ACCOUNT=<storage account name> \
--from-literal=AZURE_STORAGE_KEY=<storage account key> \
--from-literal=AZURE_STORAGE_SAS_TOKEN=<SAS token> \
--from-literal=AZURE_STORAGE_CONNECTION_STRING=<connection string>
The credentials will be encrypted at rest, if this feature is enabled in the used Kubernetes cluster.
Given the previous secret, the provided credentials can be injected inside the cluster configuration:
apiVersion: postgresql.cnpg.io/v1
kind: Cluster
[...]
spec:
backup:
barmanObjectStore:
destinationPath: "<destination path here>"
azureCredentials:
connectionString:
name: azure-creds
key: AZURE_CONNECTION_STRING
storageAccount:
name: azure-creds
key: AZURE_STORAGE_ACCOUNT
storageKey:
name: azure-creds
key: AZURE_STORAGE_KEY
storageSasToken:
name: azure-creds
key: AZURE_STORAGE_SAS_TOKEN
When using the Azure Blob Storage, the destinationPath
fulfills the following
structure:
<http|https>://<account-name>.<service-name>.core.windows.net/<resource-path>
where <resource-path>
is <container>/<blob>
. The account name,
which is also called storage account name, is included in the used host name.
Other Azure Blob Storage compatible providers
If you are using a different implementation of the Azure Blob Storage APIs,
the destinationPath
will have the following structure:
<http|https>://<local-machine-address>:<port>/<account-name>/<resource-path>
In that case, <account-name>
is the first component of the path.
This is required if you are testing the Azure support via the Azure Storage Emulator or Azurite.
Google Cloud Storage
Currently, the CloudNativePG operator supports two authentication methods for Google Cloud Storage:
- the first one assumes that the pod is running inside a Google Kubernetes Engine cluster
- the second one leverages the environment variable
GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS
Running inside Google Kubernetes Engine
When running inside Google Kubernetes Engine you can configure your backups to simply rely on Workload Identity, without having to set any credentials. In particular, you need to:
- set
.spec.backup.barmanObjectStore.googleCredentials.gkeEnvironment
totrue
- set the
iam.gke.io/gcp-service-account
annotation in theserviceAccountTemplate
stanza
Please use the following example as a reference:
apiVersion: postgresql.cnpg.io/v1
kind: Cluster
[...]
spec:
[...]
backup:
barmanObjectStore:
destinationPath: "gs://<destination path here>"
googleCredentials:
gkeEnvironment: true
serviceAccountTemplate:
metadata:
annotations:
iam.gke.io/gcp-service-account: [...].iam.gserviceaccount.com
[...]
Using authentication
Following the instruction from Google you will get a JSON file that contains all the required information to authenticate.
The content of the JSON file must be provided using a Secret
that can be created
with the following command:
kubectl create secret generic backup-creds --from-file=gcsCredentials=gcs_credentials_file.json
This will create the Secret
with the name backup-creds
to be used in the yaml file like this:
apiVersion: postgresql.cnpg.io/v1
kind: Cluster
[...]
spec:
backup:
barmanObjectStore:
destinationPath: "gs://<destination path here>"
googleCredentials:
applicationCredentials:
name: backup-creds
key: gcsCredentials
Now the operator will use the credentials to authenticate against Google Cloud Storage.
Important
This way of authentication will create a JSON file inside the container with all the needed information to access your Google Cloud Storage bucket, meaning that if someone gets access to the pod will also have write permissions to the bucket.
MinIO Gateway
Optionally, you can use MinIO Gateway as a common interface which relays backup objects to other cloud storage solutions, like S3 or GCS. For more information, please refer to MinIO official documentation.
Specifically, the CloudNativePG cluster can directly point to a local MinIO Gateway as an endpoint, using previously created credentials and service.
MinIO secrets will be used by both the PostgreSQL cluster and the MinIO instance. Therefore, you must create them in the same namespace:
kubectl create secret generic minio-creds \
--from-literal=MINIO_ACCESS_KEY=<minio access key here> \
--from-literal=MINIO_SECRET_KEY=<minio secret key here>
Note
Cloud Object Storage credentials will be used only by MinIO Gateway in this case.
Important
In order to allow PostgreSQL to reach MinIO Gateway, it is necessary to create a
ClusterIP
service on port 9000
bound to the MinIO Gateway instance.
For example:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: minio-gateway-service
spec:
type: ClusterIP
ports:
- port: 9000
targetPort: 9000
protocol: TCP
selector:
app: minio
Warning
At the time of writing this documentation, the official
MinIO Operator
for Kubernetes does not support the gateway feature. As such, we will use a
deployment
instead.
The MinIO deployment will use cloud storage credentials to upload objects to the remote bucket and relay backup files to different locations.
Here is an example using AWS S3 as Cloud Object Storage:
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
[...]
spec:
containers:
- name: minio
image: minio/minio:RELEASE.2020-06-03T22-13-49Z
args:
- gateway
- s3
env:
# MinIO access key and secret key
- name: MINIO_ACCESS_KEY
valueFrom:
secretKeyRef:
name: minio-creds
key: MINIO_ACCESS_KEY
- name: MINIO_SECRET_KEY
valueFrom:
secretKeyRef:
name: minio-creds
key: MINIO_SECRET_KEY
# AWS credentials
- name: AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID
valueFrom:
secretKeyRef:
name: aws-creds
key: ACCESS_KEY_ID
- name: AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
valueFrom:
secretKeyRef:
name: aws-creds
key: ACCESS_SECRET_KEY
# Uncomment the below section if session token is required
# - name: AWS_SESSION_TOKEN
# valueFrom:
# secretKeyRef:
# name: aws-creds
# key: ACCESS_SESSION_TOKEN
ports:
- containerPort: 9000
Proceed by configuring MinIO Gateway service as the endpointURL
in the Cluster
definition, then choose a bucket name to replace BUCKET_NAME
:
apiVersion: postgresql.cnpg.io/v1
kind: Cluster
[...]
spec:
backup:
barmanObjectStore:
destinationPath: s3://BUCKET_NAME/
endpointURL: http://minio-gateway-service:9000
s3Credentials:
accessKeyId:
name: minio-creds
key: MINIO_ACCESS_KEY
secretAccessKey:
name: minio-creds
key: MINIO_SECRET_KEY
[...]
Verify on s3://BUCKET_NAME/
the presence of archived WAL files before
proceeding with a backup.