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Using IRSA with Stash on Amazon EKS
This guide will show you how to use IRSA(IAM Roles for Service Accounts) of Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (Amazon EKS) with Stash. Here, we are going to backup a MariaDB database and store the backed up data into a AWS S3 bucket.Then, we are going to show how to restore this backed up data.
Before You Begin
- At first, you need to have an EKS cluster with IRSA enabled. If you don’t already have a cluster, create one from here.
- Install
Stash
in your cluster following the steps here. - Install
KubeDB
operator in your cluster following the steps here. - You should be familiar with the following
Stash
concepts: - You will need a AWS S3 Bucket to store the backup snapshots.
- Install
eksctl
following the steps here.
To keep everything isolated, we are going to use a separate namespace called demo
throughout this tutorial.
$ kubectl create ns demo
namespace/demo created
Prepare MariaDB
In this section, we are going to deploy a MariaDB database using KubeDB. Then, we are going to insert some sample data into it.
Deploy MariaDB using KubeDB
At first, let’s deploy a MariaDB standalone database named sample-mariadb
using KubeDB,
apiVersion: kubedb.com/v1alpha2
kind: MariaDB
metadata:
name: sample-mariadb
namespace: demo
spec:
version: "10.5.8"
replicas: 1
storageType: Durable
storage:
storageClassName: "standard"
accessModes:
- ReadWriteOnce
resources:
requests:
storage: 1Gi
terminationPolicy: WipeOut
$ kubectl apply -f https://github.com/stashed/docs/raw/v2023.02.28/docs/guides/platforms/eks-irsa/examples/mariadb.yaml
mariadb.kubedb.com/sample-mariadb created
Now, wait for the database pod sample-mariadb-0
to go into Running state,
$ kubectl get pod -n demo sample-mariadb-0
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
sample-mariadb-0 1/1 Running 0 29m
Once the database pod is in Running state, verify that the database is ready to accept the connections.
$ kubectl logs -n demo sample-mariadb-0
2021-02-22 9:41:37 0 [Note] Reading of all Master_info entries succeeded
2021-02-22 9:41:37 0 [Note] Added new Master_info '' to hash table
2021-02-22 9:41:37 0 [Note] mysqld: ready for connections.
Version: '10.5.8-MariaDB-1:10.5.8+maria~focal' socket: '/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock' port: 3306 mariadb.org binary distribution
From the above log, we can see the database is ready to accept connections.
Insert Sample Data
Now, we are going to exec into the database pod and create some sample data. The sample-mariadb object creates a secret containing the credentials of MariaDB and set them as pod’s Environment varibles MYSQL_ROOT_USERNAME
and MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD
.
Here, we are going to use the root user (MYSQL_ROOT_USERNAME
) credential MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD
to insert the sample data. Let’s exec into the database pod and insert some sample data,
$ kubectl exec -it -n demo sample-mariadb-0 -- bash
root@sample-mariadb-0:/ mysql -u${MYSQL_ROOT_USERNAME} -p${MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD}
Welcome to the MariaDB monitor. Commands end with ; or \g.
Your MariaDB connection id is 341
Server version: 10.5.8-MariaDB-1:10.5.8+maria~focal mariadb.org binary distribution
Copyright (c) 2000, 2018, Oracle, MariaDB Corporation Ab and others.
Type 'help;' or '\h' for help. Type '\c' to clear the current input statement.
# Let's create a database named "company"
MariaDB [(none)]> create database company;
Query OK, 1 row affected (0.000 sec)
# Verify that the database has been created successfully
MariaDB [(none)]> show databases;
+--------------------+
| Database |
+--------------------+
| company |
| information_schema |
| mysql |
| performance_schema |
+--------------------+
4 rows in set (0.001 sec)
# Now, let's create a table called "employee" in the "company" table
MariaDB [(none)]> create table company.employees ( name varchar(50), salary int);
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.018 sec)
# Verify that the table has been created successfully
MariaDB [(none)]> show tables in company;
+-------------------+
| Tables_in_company |
+-------------------+
| employees |
+-------------------+
1 row in set (0.007 sec)
# Now, let's insert a sample row in the table
MariaDB [(none)]> insert into company.employees values ('John Doe', 5000);
Query OK, 1 row affected (0.003 sec)
# Insert another sample row
MariaDB [(none)]> insert into company.employees values ('James William', 7000);
Query OK, 1 row affected (0.002 sec)
# Verify that the rows have been inserted into the table successfully
MariaDB [(none)]> select * from company.employees;
+---------------+--------+
| name | salary |
+---------------+--------+
| John Doe | 5000 |
| James William | 7000 |
+---------------+--------+
2 rows in set (0.001 sec)
MariaDB [(none)]> exit
Bye
We have successfully deployed a MariaDB database and inserted some sample data into it.
Prepare Backup
In this section, we are going to prepare the necessary resources (i.e. database connection information, backend information, etc.) before backup.
Verify Stash MariaDB Addon Installed
When you install the Stash Enterprise edition, it automatically installs all the official database addons. Verify that it has installed the MariaDB addons using the following command.
$ kubectl get tasks.stash.appscode.com | grep mariadb
mariadb-backup-10.5.8 35s
mariadb-restore-10.5.8 35s
Ensure AppBinding
Stash needs to know how to connect with the database. An AppBinding
exactly provides this information. It holds the Service and Secret information of the database. You have to point to the respective AppBinding
as a target of backup instead of the database itself.
Stash expect your database Secret to have username
and password
keys. If your database secret does not have them, the AppBinding
can also help here. You can specify a secretTransforms
section with the mapping between the current keys and the desired keys.
You don’t need to worry about appbindings if you are using KubeDB. It creates an appbinding containing the necessary informations when you deploy the database. Let’s ensure the appbinding create by KubeDB
operator.
$ kubectl get appbinding -n demo
NAME TYPE VERSION AGE
sample-mariadb kubedb.com/mariadb 10.5.8 62m
We have a appbinding named same as database name sample-mariadb. We will use this later for connecting into this database.
Prepare Backend
We are going to store our backed up data into a S3 bucket. As we are using IRSA, we don’t need the AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID
and AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
to access the S3 bucket.
At first, we need to create a secret with a Restic password. Then, we have to create a Repository
crd that will hold the information about our backend storage.
Create Secret:
Let’s create a secret called encryption-secret
with the Restic password,
$ echo -n 'changeit' > RESTIC_PASSWORD
$ kubectl create secret generic -n demo encryption-secret \
--from-file=./RESTIC_PASSWORD \
secret "encryption-secret" created
Create Repository:
Now, let’s create a Repository
with the information of our desired S3 bucket. Below is the YAML of Repository
crd we are going to create,
apiVersion: stash.appscode.com/v1alpha1
kind: Repository
metadata:
name: s3-repo
namespace: demo
spec:
backend:
s3:
endpoint: 's3.amazonaws.com'
bucket: stash-qa
region: us-east-1
prefix: /demo/mariadb
storageSecretName: encryption-secret
Let’s create the Repository
we have shown above,
$ kubectl apply -f https://github.com/stashed/docs/raw/v2023.02.28/docs/guides/platforms/eks-irsa/examples/repository.yaml
repository.stash.appscode.com/gcs-repo created
Now, we are ready to backup our sample data into this backend.
Create IAM Policy
We need a IAM policy for accessing S3 buckets. Below is the JSON
of the IAM policy we are going to create,
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Sid": "VisualEditor0",
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": "s3:*",
"Resource": "*"
}
]
}
Let’s navigate to the IAM management console to create a policy bucket-accessor
with full access permission to S3 bucket.
Create ServiceAccount
We need a IAM role with the policy bucket-accessor
attached and a Kubernetes service account annotated with that IAM role. Use the following command to do all these steps at once.
eksctl create iamserviceaccount \
--name bucket-user \
--namespace demo \
--cluster irsa-demo \
--attach-policy-arn arn:aws:iam::452618475015:policy/bucket-accessor\
--approve
This command will create a IAM role with the bucket-accessor
policy attaced and a service account bucket-acessor-ksa
annotated with that IAM role in the demo namespace. We will use the service account in the BackupConfiguration
and RestoreSession
to enable backup and restore using IRSA.
Backup
To schedule a backup, we have to create a BackupConfiguration
object targeting the respective AppBinding of our desired database. Then Stash will create a CronJob to periodically backup the database.
Create BackupConfiguration:
Below is the YAML
for BackupConfiguration object we are going to use to backup the sample-mariadb database we have deployed earlier,
apiVersion: stash.appscode.com/v1beta1
kind: BackupConfiguration
metadata:
name: sample-mariadb-backup
namespace: demo
spec:
runtimeSettings:
pod:
serviceAccountName: bucket-user
schedule: "*/5 * * * *"
repository:
name: s3-repo
target:
ref:
apiVersion: appcatalog.appscode.com/v1alpha1
kind: AppBinding
name: sample-mariadb
retentionPolicy:
name: keep-last-5
keepLast: 5
prune: true
Here,
spec.runtimeSettins.pod.serviceAccountName
refers to the name of theServiceAccount
to use in the backup pod.spec.repository
refers to theRepository
objectgcs-repo
that holds backend GCS bucket information.spec.target.ref
refers to the AppBinding object that holds the connection information of our targeted database.
Let’s create the BackupConfiguration
crd we have shown above,
$ kubectl apply -f https://github.com/stashed/docs/raw/v2023.02.28/docs/guides/platforms/eks-irsa/examples/backupconfiguration.yaml
backupconfiguration.stash.appscode.com/sample-mariadb-backup created
Verify Backup Setup Successful:
If everything goes well, the phase of the BackupConfiguration
should be Ready
. The Ready
phase indicates that the backup setup is successful. Let’s verify the Phase of the BackupConfiguration
,
$ kubectl get backupconfiguration -n demo
NAME TASK SCHEDULE PAUSED PHASE AGE
sample-mariadb-backup mariadb-backup-10.5.8 */5 * * * * Ready 11s
Verify CronJob:
Stash will create a CronJob with the schedule specified in spec.schedule
field of BackupConfiguration
object.
Verify that the CronJob has been created using the following command,
$ kubectl get cronjob -n demo
NAME SCHEDULE SUSPEND ACTIVE LAST SCHEDULE AGE
stash-backup-sample-mariadb-backup */5 * * * * False 0 15s 17s
Wait for BackupSession:
The sample-mariadb-backup
CronJob will trigger a backup on each scheduled slot by creating a BackupSession
object.
Now, wait for a schedule to appear. Run the following command to watch for a BackupSession
object,
$ kubectl get backupsession -n demo -w
NAME INVOKER-TYPE INVOKER-NAME PHASE AGE
sample-mariadb-backup-1606994706 BackupConfiguration sample-mariadb-backup Running 24s
sample-mariadb-backup-1606994706 BackupConfiguration sample-mariadb-backup Running 75s
sample-mariadb-backup-1606994706 BackupConfiguration sample-mariadb-backup Succeeded 103s
Here, the phase Succeeded
means that the backup process has been completed successfully.
Verify Backup:
Now, we are going to verify whether the backed up data is present in the backend or not. Once a backup is completed, Stash will update the respective Repository
object to reflect the backup completion. Check that the repository gcs-repo
has been updated by the following command,
$ kubectl get repository -n demo gcs-repo
NAME INTEGRITY SIZE SNAPSHOT-COUNT LAST-SUCCESSFUL-BACKUP AGE
gcs-repo true 1.327 MiB 1 60s 8m
Now, if we navigate to the GCS bucket, we will see the backed up data has been stored in demo/mariadb/sample-mariadb
directory as specified by .spec.backend.gcs.prefix
field of the Repository object.
Note: Stash keeps all the backed up data encrypted. So, data in the backend will not make any sense until they are decrypted.
Restore
In this section, we are going to show you how to restore in the same database which may be necessary when you have accidentally deleted any data from the running database.
Temporarily Pause Backup:
At first, let’s stop taking any further backup of the database so that no backup runs after we delete the sample data. We are going to pause the BackupConfiguration
object. Stash will stop taking any further backup when the BackupConfiguration
is paused.
Let’s pause the sample-mariadb-backup
BackupConfiguration,
$ kubectl patch backupconfiguration -n demo sample-mariadb-backup--type="merge" --patch='{"spec": {"paused": true}}'
backupconfiguration.stash.appscode.com/sample-mgo-rs-backup patched
Or you can use the Stash kubectl
plugin to pause the BackupConfiguration
,
$ kubectl stash pause backup -n demo --backupconfig=sample-mariadb-backup
BackupConfiguration demo/sample-mariadb-backup has been paused successfully.
Verify that the BackupConfiguration
has been paused,
$ kubectl get backupconfiguration -n demo sample-mariadb-backup
NAME TASK SCHEDULE PAUSED PHASE AGE
sample-mariadb-backup mariadb-backup-10.5.8 */5 * * * * true Ready 26m
Notice the PAUSED
column. Value true
for this field means that the BackupConfiguration
has been paused.
Stash will also suspend the respective CronJob.
$ kubectl get cronjob -n demo
NAME SCHEDULE SUSPEND ACTIVE LAST SCHEDULE AGE
stash-backup-sample-mariadb-backup */5 * * * * True 0 2m59s 20m
Simulate Disaster:
Now, let’s simulate an accidental deletion scenario. Here, we are going to exec into the database pod and delete the company
database we had created earlier.
$ kubectl exec -it -n demo sample-mariadb-0 -c mariadb -- bash
root@sample-mariadb-0:/ mysql -u${MYSQL_ROOT_USERNAME} -p${MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD}
Welcome to the MariaDB monitor. Commands end with ; or \g.
Your MariaDB connection id is 341
Server version: 10.5.8-MariaDB-1:10.5.8+maria~focal mariadb.org binary distribution
Copyright (c) 2000, 2018, Oracle, MariaDB Corporation Ab and others.
Type 'help;' or '\h' for help. Type '\c' to clear the current input statement.
# View current databases
MariaDB [(none)]> show databases;
+--------------------+
| Database |
+--------------------+
| company |
| information_schema |
| mysql |
| performance_schema |
+--------------------+
4 rows in set (0.001 sec)
# Let's delete the "company" database
MariaDB [(none)]> drop database company;
Query OK, 1 row affected (0.268 sec)
# Verify that the "company" database has been deleted
MariaDB [(none)]> show databases;
+--------------------+
| Database |
+--------------------+
| information_schema |
| mysql |
| performance_schema |
+--------------------+
3 rows in set (0.000 sec)
MariaDB [(none)]> exit
Bye
Create RestoreSession:
To restore the database, you have to create a RestoreSession
object pointing to the AppBinding
of the targeted database.
Here, is the YAML
of the RestoreSession
object that we are going to use for restoring our sample-mariadb
database.
apiVersion: stash.appscode.com/v1beta1
kind: RestoreSession
metadata:
name: sample-mariadb-restore
namespace: demo
spec:
runtimeSettings:
pod:
serviceAccountName: bucket-user
repository:
name: s3-repo
target:
ref:
apiVersion: appcatalog.appscode.com/v1alpha1
kind: AppBinding
name: sample-mariadb
rules:
- snapshots: [latest]
Here,
spec.runtimeSettins.pod.serviceAccountName
refers to the name of theServiceAccount
to use in the restore pod.spec.repository.name
specifies the Repository object that holds the backend information where our backed up data has been stored.spec.target.ref
refers to the respective AppBinding of thesample-mariadb
database.spec.rules
specifies that we are restoring data from the latest backup snapshot of the database.
Let’s create the RestoreSession
object object we have shown above,
$ kubectl apply -f https://github.com/stashed/docs/raw/v2023.02.28/docs/guides/platforms/eks-irsa/examples/restoresession.yaml
restoresession.stash.appscode.com/sample-mariadb-restore created
Once, you have created the RestoreSession
object, Stash will create a restore Job. Run the following command to watch the phase of the RestoreSession
object,
$ kubectl get restoresession -n demo -w
NAME REPOSITORY PHASE AGE
sample-mariadb-restore gcs-repo Running 15s
sample-mariadb-restore gcs-repo Succeeded 18s
The Succeeded
phase means that the restore process has been completed successfully.
Verify Restored Data:
Now, let’s exec into the database pod and verify whether data actual data was restored or not,
$ kubectl exec -it -n demo sample-mariadb-0 -c mariadb -- bash
root@sample-mariadb-0:/ mysql -u${MYSQL_ROOT_USERNAME} -p${MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD}
Welcome to the MariaDB monitor. Commands end with ; or \g.
Your MariaDB connection id is 341
Server version: 10.5.8-MariaDB-1:10.5.8+maria~focal mariadb.org binary distribution
Copyright (c) 2000, 2018, Oracle, MariaDB Corporation Ab and others.
Type 'help;' or '\h' for help. Type '\c' to clear the current input statement.
# Verify that the "company" database has been restored
MariaDB [(none)]> show databases;
+--------------------+
| Database |
+--------------------+
| company |
| information_schema |
| mysql |
| performance_schema |
+--------------------+
4 rows in set (0.001 sec)
# Verify that the tables of the "company" database have been restored
MariaDB [(none)]> show tables from company;
+-------------------+
| Tables_in_company |
+-------------------+
| employees |
+-------------------+
1 row in set (0.000 sec)
# Verify that the sample data of the "employees" table has been restored
MariaDB [(none)]> select * from company.employees;
+---------------+--------+
| name | salary |
+---------------+--------+
| John Doe | 5000 |
| James William | 7000 |
+---------------+--------+
2 rows in set (0.000 sec)
MariaDB [(none)]> exit
Bye
Hence, we can see from the above output that the deleted data has been restored successfully from the backup.
Resume Backup
Since our data has been restored successfully we can now resume our usual backup process. Resume the BackupConfiguration
using following command,
$ kubectl patch backupconfiguration -n demo sample-mariadb-backup --type="merge" --patch='{"spec": {"paused": false}}'
backupconfiguration.stash.appscode.com/sample-mariadb-backup patched
Or you can use the Stash kubectl
plugin to resume the BackupConfiguration
,
$ kubectl stash resume -n demo --backupconfig=sample-mariadb-backup
BackupConfiguration demo/sample-mariadb-backup has been resumed successfully.
Verify that the BackupConfiguration
has been resumed,
$ kubectl get backupconfiguration -n demo sample-mariadb-backup
NAME TASK SCHEDULE PAUSED PHASE AGE
sample-mariadb-backup mariadb-backup-10.5.8 */5 * * * * false Ready 29m
Here, false
in the PAUSED
column means the backup has been resume successfully. The CronJob also should be resumed now.
$ kubectl get cronjob -n demo
NAME SCHEDULE SUSPEND ACTIVE LAST SCHEDULE AGE
stash-backup-sample-mariadb-backup */5 * * * * False 0 2m59s 29m
Here, False
in the SUSPEND
column means the CronJob is no longer suspended and will trigger in the next schedule.
Allow Operator to List Snapshots
When you list Snapshots using kubectl get snapshot
command, Stash operator itself read the Snapshots directly from the backend. So, the operator needs permission to access the bucket. Stash operator has it own’s ServiceAccount
. Therefore, this ServiceAccount
should be binded with a IAM role with access to S3 as well.
Run the following command to get the service account used by the Stash operator,
$ kubectl get serviceaccount -n stash stash-stash-enterprise
NAME SECRETS AGE
stash-stash-enterprise 1 9m52s
Run the following command to create a IAM role bound to the operator service account,
eksctl create iamserviceaccount \
--name stash-stash-enterprise \
--namespace stash \
--cluster irsa-demo \
--attach-policy-arn arn:aws:iam::452618475015:policy/bucket-accessor\
--approve
--override-existing-serviceaccounts
Cleanup
To cleanup the Kubernetes resources created by this tutorial, run:
kubectl delete -n demo backupconfiguration sample-mariadb-backup
kubectl delete -n demo restoresession sample-mariadb-restore
kubectl delete -n demo secret encryption-secret
kubectl delete -n demo repository gcs-repo
kubectl delete -n demo mariadb sample-mariadb
kubectl delete ns demo