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---
assignees:
- bprashanth
- enisoc
- erictune
- foxish
- janetkuo
- kow3ns
- smarterclayton
2016-12-15 20:16:54 +00:00
title: Running a Replicated Stateful Application
redirect_from:
- "/docs/tutorials/stateful-application/run-replicated-stateful-application/"
- "/docs/tutorials/stateful-application/run-replicated-stateful-application.html"
---
{% capture overview %}
This page shows how to run a replicated stateful application using a
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[StatefulSet](/docs/concepts/abstractions/controllers/statefulsets/) controller.
The example is a MySQL single-master topology with multiple slaves running
asynchronous replication.
Note that **this is not a production configuration**.
In particular, MySQL settings remain on insecure defaults to keep the focus
on general patterns for running stateful applications in Kubernetes.
{% endcapture %}
{% capture prerequisites %}
* {% include task-tutorial-prereqs.md %}
* {% include default-storage-class-prereqs.md %}
* This tutorial assumes you are familiar with
[PersistentVolumes](/docs/concepts/storage/persistent-volumes/)
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and [StatefulSets](/docs/concepts/abstractions/controllers/statefulsets/),
as well as other core concepts like [Pods](/docs/concepts/workloads/pods/pod/),
[Services](/docs/concepts/services-networking/service/), and
[ConfigMaps](/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/configmap/).
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* Some familiarity with MySQL helps, but this tutorial aims to present
general patterns that should be useful for other systems.
{% endcapture %}
{% capture objectives %}
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* Deploy a replicated MySQL topology with a StatefulSet controller.
* Send MySQL client traffic.
* Observe resistance to downtime.
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* Scale the StatefulSet up and down.
{% endcapture %}
{% capture lessoncontent %}
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## Deploying MySQL
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The example MySQL deployment consists of a ConfigMap, two Services,
and a StatefulSet.
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### ConfigMap
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Create the ConfigMap from the following YAML configuration file:
```shell
kubectl create -f https://k8s.io/docs/tasks/run-application/mysql-configmap.yaml
```
{% include code.html language="yaml" file="mysql-configmap.yaml" ghlink="/docs/tutorials/run-application/mysql-configmap.yaml" %}
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This ConfigMap provides `my.cnf` overrides that let you independently control
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configuration on the MySQL master and slaves.
In this case, you want the master to be able to serve replication logs to slaves
and you want slaves to reject any writes that don't come via replication.
There's nothing special about the ConfigMap itself that causes different
portions to apply to different Pods.
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Each Pod decides which portion to look at as it's initializing,
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based on information provided by the StatefulSet controller.
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### Services
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Create the Services from the following YAML configuration file:
```shell
kubectl create -f https://k8s.io/docs/tasks/run-application/mysql-services.yaml
```
{% include code.html language="yaml" file="mysql-services.yaml" ghlink="/docs/tutorials/run-application/mysql-services.yaml" %}
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The Headless Service provides a home for the DNS entries that the StatefulSet
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controller creates for each Pod that's part of the set.
Because the Headless Service is named `mysql`, the Pods are accessible by
resolving `<pod-name>.mysql` from within any other Pod in the same Kubernetes
cluster and namespace.
The Client Service, called `mysql-read`, is a normal Service with its own
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cluster IP that distributes connections across all MySQL Pods that report
being Ready. The set of potential endpoints includes the MySQL master and all
slaves.
Note that only read queries can use the load-balanced Client Service.
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Because there is only one MySQL master, clients should connect directly to the
MySQL master Pod (through its DNS entry within the Headless Service) to execute
writes.
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### StatefulSet
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Finally, create the StatefulSet from the following YAML configuration file:
```shell
kubectl create -f https://k8s.io/docs/tasks/run-application/mysql-statefulset.yaml
```
{% include code.html language="yaml" file="mysql-statefulset.yaml" ghlink="/docs/tutorials/run-application/mysql-statefulset.yaml" %}
You can watch the startup progress by running:
```shell
kubectl get pods -l app=mysql --watch
```
After a while, you should see all 3 Pods become Running:
```
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
mysql-0 2/2 Running 0 2m
mysql-1 2/2 Running 0 1m
mysql-2 2/2 Running 0 1m
```
Press **Ctrl+C** to cancel the watch.
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If you don't see any progress, make sure you have a dynamic PersistentVolume
provisioner enabled as mentioned in the [prerequisites](#before-you-begin).
This manifest uses a variety of techniques for managing stateful Pods as part of
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a StatefulSet. The next section highlights some of these techniques to explain
what happens as the StatefulSet creates Pods.
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## Understanding stateful Pod initialization
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The StatefulSet controller starts Pods one at a time, in order by their
ordinal index.
It waits until each Pod reports being Ready before starting the next one.
In addition, the controller assigns each Pod a unique, stable name of the form
`<statefulset-name>-<ordinal-index>`.
In this case, that results in Pods named `mysql-0`, `mysql-1`, and `mysql-2`.
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The Pod template in the above StatefulSet manifest takes advantage of these
properties to perform orderly startup of MySQL replication.
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### Generating configuration
Before starting any of the containers in the Pod spec, the Pod first runs any
[Init Containers](/docs/user-guide/production-pods/#handling-initialization)
in the order defined.
The first Init Container, named `init-mysql`, generates special MySQL config
files based on the ordinal index.
The script determines its own ordinal index by extracting it from the end of
the Pod name, which is returned by the `hostname` command.
Then it saves the ordinal (with a numeric offset to avoid reserved values)
into a file called `server-id.cnf` in the MySQL `conf.d` directory.
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This translates the unique, stable identity provided by the StatefulSet
controller into the domain of MySQL server IDs, which require the same
properties.
The script in the `init-mysql` container also applies either `master.cnf` or
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`slave.cnf` from the ConfigMap by copying the contents into `conf.d`.
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Because the example topology consists of a single MySQL master and any number of
slaves, the script simply assigns ordinal `0` to be the master, and everyone
else to be slaves.
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Combined with the StatefulSet controller's
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[deployment order guarantee](/docs/concepts/abstractions/controllers/statefulsets/#deployment-and-scaling-guarantee),
this ensures the MySQL master is Ready before creating slaves, so they can begin
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replicating.
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### Cloning existing data
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In general, when a new Pod joins the set as a slave, it must assume the MySQL
master might already have data on it. It also must assume that the replication
logs might not go all the way back to the beginning of time.
These conservative assumptions are the key to allow a running StatefulSet
to scale up and down over time, rather than being fixed at its initial size.
The second Init Container, named `clone-mysql`, performs a clone operation on
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a slave Pod the first time it starts up on an empty PersistentVolume.
That means it copies all existing data from another running Pod,
so its local state is consistent enough to begin replicating from the master.
MySQL itself does not provide a mechanism to do this, so the example uses a
popular open-source tool called Percona XtraBackup.
During the clone, the source MySQL server might suffer reduced performance.
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To minimize impact on the MySQL master, the script instructs each Pod to clone
from the Pod whose ordinal index is one lower.
This works because the StatefulSet controller always ensures Pod `N` is
Ready before starting Pod `N+1`.
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### Starting replication
After the Init Containers complete successfully, the regular containers run.
The MySQL Pods consist of a `mysql` container that runs the actual `mysqld`
server, and an `xtrabackup` container that acts as a
[sidecar](http://blog.kubernetes.io/2015/06/the-distributed-system-toolkit-patterns.html).
The `xtrabackup` sidecar looks at the cloned data files and determines if
it's necessary to initialize MySQL replication on the slave.
If so, it waits for `mysqld` to be ready and then executes the
`CHANGE MASTER TO` and `START SLAVE` commands with replication parameters
extracted from the XtraBackup clone files.
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Once a slave begins replication, it remembers its MySQL master and
reconnects automatically if the server restarts or the connection dies.
Also, because slaves look for the master at its stable DNS name
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(`mysql-0.mysql`), they automatically find the master even if it gets a new
Pod IP due to being rescheduled.
Lastly, after starting replication, the `xtrabackup` container listens for
connections from other Pods requesting a data clone.
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This server remains up indefinitely in case the StatefulSet scales up, or in
case the next Pod loses its PersistentVolumeClaim and needs to redo the clone.
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## Sending client traffic
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You can send test queries to the MySQL master (hostname `mysql-0.mysql`)
by running a temporary container with the `mysql:5.7` image and running the
`mysql` client binary.
```shell
kubectl run mysql-client --image=mysql:5.7 -i -t --rm --restart=Never --\
mysql -h mysql-0.mysql <<EOF
CREATE DATABASE test;
CREATE TABLE test.messages (message VARCHAR(250));
INSERT INTO test.messages VALUES ('hello');
EOF
```
Use the hostname `mysql-read` to send test queries to any server that reports
being Ready:
```shell
kubectl run mysql-client --image=mysql:5.7 -i -t --rm --restart=Never --\
mysql -h mysql-read -e "SELECT * FROM test.messages"
```
You should get output like this:
```
Waiting for pod default/mysql-client to be running, status is Pending, pod ready: false
+---------+
| message |
+---------+
| hello |
+---------+
pod "mysql-client" deleted
```
To demonstrate that the `mysql-read` Service distributes connections across
servers, you can run `SELECT @@server_id` in a loop:
```shell
kubectl run mysql-client-loop --image=mysql:5.7 -i -t --rm --restart=Never --\
bash -ic "while sleep 1; do mysql -h mysql-read -e 'SELECT @@server_id,NOW()'; done"
```
You should see the reported `@@server_id` change randomly, because a different
endpoint might be selected upon each connection attempt:
```
+-------------+---------------------+
| @@server_id | NOW() |
+-------------+---------------------+
| 100 | 2006-01-02 15:04:05 |
+-------------+---------------------+
+-------------+---------------------+
| @@server_id | NOW() |
+-------------+---------------------+
| 102 | 2006-01-02 15:04:06 |
+-------------+---------------------+
+-------------+---------------------+
| @@server_id | NOW() |
+-------------+---------------------+
| 101 | 2006-01-02 15:04:07 |
+-------------+---------------------+
```
You can press **Ctrl+C** when you want to stop the loop, but it's useful to keep
it running in another window so you can see the effects of the following steps.
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## Simulating Pod and Node downtime
To demonstrate the increased availability of reading from the pool of slaves
instead of a single server, keep the `SELECT @@server_id` loop from above
running while you force a Pod out of the Ready state.
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### Break the Readiness Probe
The [readiness probe](/docs/user-guide/production-pods/#liveness-and-readiness-probes-aka-health-checks)
for the `mysql` container runs the command `mysql -h 127.0.0.1 -e 'SELECT 1'`
to make sure the server is up and able to execute queries.
One way to force this readiness probe to fail is to break that command:
```shell
kubectl exec mysql-2 -c mysql -- mv /usr/bin/mysql /usr/bin/mysql.off
```
This reaches into the actual container's filesystem for Pod `mysql-2` and
renames the `mysql` command so the readiness probe can't find it.
After a few seconds, the Pod should report one of its containers as not Ready,
which you can check by running:
```shell
kubectl get pod mysql-2
```
Look for `1/2` in the `READY` column:
```
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
mysql-2 1/2 Running 0 3m
```
At this point, you should see your `SELECT @@server_id` loop continue to run,
although it never reports `102` anymore.
Recall that the `init-mysql` script defined `server-id` as `100 + $ordinal`,
so server ID `102` corresponds to Pod `mysql-2`.
Now repair the Pod and it should reappear in the loop output
after a few seconds:
```shell
kubectl exec mysql-2 -c mysql -- mv /usr/bin/mysql.off /usr/bin/mysql
```
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### Delete Pods
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The StatefulSet also recreates Pods if they're deleted, similar to what a
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ReplicaSet does for stateless Pods.
```shell
kubectl delete pod mysql-2
```
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The StatefulSet controller notices that no `mysql-2` Pod exists anymore,
and creates a new one with the same name and linked to the same
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PersistentVolumeClaim.
You should see server ID `102` disappear from the loop output for a while
and then return on its own.
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### Drain a Node
If your Kubernetes cluster has multiple Nodes, you can simulate Node downtime
(such as when Nodes are upgraded) by issuing a
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[drain](/docs/user-guide/kubectl/v1.6/#drain).
First determine which Node one of the MySQL Pods is on:
```shell
kubectl get pod mysql-2 -o wide
```
The Node name should show up in the last column:
```
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE IP NODE
mysql-2 2/2 Running 0 15m 10.244.5.27 kubernetes-minion-group-9l2t
```
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Then drain the Node by running the following command, which cordons it so
no new Pods may schedule there, and then evicts any existing Pods.
Replace `<node-name>` with the name of the Node you found in the last step.
This might impact other applications on the Node, so it's best to
**only do this in a test cluster**.
```shell
kubectl drain <node-name> --force --delete-local-data --ignore-daemonsets
```
Now you can watch as the Pod reschedules on a different Node:
```shell
kubectl get pod mysql-2 -o wide --watch
```
It should look something like this:
```
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE IP NODE
mysql-2 2/2 Terminating 0 15m 10.244.1.56 kubernetes-minion-group-9l2t
[...]
mysql-2 0/2 Pending 0 0s <none> kubernetes-minion-group-fjlm
mysql-2 0/2 Init:0/2 0 0s <none> kubernetes-minion-group-fjlm
mysql-2 0/2 Init:1/2 0 20s 10.244.5.32 kubernetes-minion-group-fjlm
mysql-2 0/2 PodInitializing 0 21s 10.244.5.32 kubernetes-minion-group-fjlm
mysql-2 1/2 Running 0 22s 10.244.5.32 kubernetes-minion-group-fjlm
mysql-2 2/2 Running 0 30s 10.244.5.32 kubernetes-minion-group-fjlm
```
And again, you should see server ID `102` disappear from the
`SELECT @@server_id` loop output for a while and then return.
Now uncordon the Node to return it to a normal state:
```shell
kubectl uncordon <node-name>
```
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## Scaling the number of slaves
With MySQL replication, you can scale your read query capacity by adding slaves.
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With StatefulSet, you can do this with a single command:
```shell
kubectl scale --replicas=5 statefulset mysql
```
Watch the new Pods come up by running:
```shell
kubectl get pods -l app=mysql --watch
```
Once they're up, you should see server IDs `103` and `104` start appearing in
the `SELECT @@server_id` loop output.
You can also verify that these new servers have the data you added before they
existed:
```shell
kubectl run mysql-client --image=mysql:5.7 -i -t --rm --restart=Never --\
mysql -h mysql-3.mysql -e "SELECT * FROM test.messages"
```
```
Waiting for pod default/mysql-client to be running, status is Pending, pod ready: false
+---------+
| message |
+---------+
| hello |
+---------+
pod "mysql-client" deleted
```
Scaling back down is also seamless:
```shell
kubectl scale --replicas=3 statefulset mysql
```
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Note, however, that while scaling up creates new PersistentVolumeClaims
automatically, scaling down does not automatically delete these PVCs.
This gives you the choice to keep those initialized PVCs around to make
scaling back up quicker, or to extract data before deleting them.
You can see this by running:
```shell
kubectl get pvc -l app=mysql
```
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Which shows that all 5 PVCs still exist, despite having scaled the
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StatefulSet down to 3:
```
NAME STATUS VOLUME CAPACITY ACCESSMODES AGE
data-mysql-0 Bound pvc-8acbf5dc-b103-11e6-93fa-42010a800002 10Gi RWO 20m
data-mysql-1 Bound pvc-8ad39820-b103-11e6-93fa-42010a800002 10Gi RWO 20m
data-mysql-2 Bound pvc-8ad69a6d-b103-11e6-93fa-42010a800002 10Gi RWO 20m
data-mysql-3 Bound pvc-50043c45-b1c5-11e6-93fa-42010a800002 10Gi RWO 2m
data-mysql-4 Bound pvc-500a9957-b1c5-11e6-93fa-42010a800002 10Gi RWO 2m
```
If you don't intend to reuse the extra PVCs, you can delete them:
```shell
kubectl delete pvc data-mysql-3
kubectl delete pvc data-mysql-4
```
{% endcapture %}
{% capture cleanup %}
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1. Cancel the `SELECT @@server_id` loop by pressing **Ctrl+C** in its terminal,
or running the following from another terminal:
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```shell
kubectl delete pod mysql-client-loop --now
```
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1. Delete the StatefulSet. This also begins terminating the Pods.
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```shell
kubectl delete statefulset mysql
```
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1. Verify that the Pods disappear.
They might take some time to finish terminating.
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```shell
kubectl get pods -l app=mysql
```
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You'll know the Pods have terminated when the above returns:
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```
No resources found.
```
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1. Delete the ConfigMap, Services, and PersistentVolumeClaims.
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```shell
kubectl delete configmap,service,pvc -l app=mysql
```
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1. If you manually provisioned PersistentVolumes, you also need to manually
delete them, as well as release the underlying resources.
If you used a dynamic provisioner, it automatically deletes the
PersistentVolumes when it sees that you deleted the PersistentVolumeClaims.
Some dynamic provisioners (such as those for EBS and PD) also release the
underlying resources upon deleting the PersistentVolumes.
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{% endcapture %}
{% capture whatsnext %}
* Look in the [Helm Charts repository](https://github.com/kubernetes/charts)
for other stateful application examples.
{% endcapture %}
{% include templates/tutorial.md %}