PostgreSQL: Difference between revisions
m (→Upgrades) |
m (→Installation) |
||
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 98: | Line 98: | ||
log-level-console=info |
log-level-console=info |
||
process-max=4 |
process-max=4 |
||
compress-type= |
compress-type=zst |
||
[main] |
[main] |
||
Line 169: | Line 169: | ||
==== Cron ==== |
==== Cron ==== |
||
We are going to use systemd timers because they are much nicer to use than cron. Install /usr/local/bin/csc-systemd-email and /etc/systemd/system/csc-email-on-failure@.service on the target machine so that we get emails for failed jobs (there should be a copy of this on caffeine). |
|||
We want backups to be taken periodically. Paste the following into e.g. /etc/cron.d/postgres_backup (this file must be owned by root): |
|||
Paste the following into /etc/systemd/system/postgres-backup@.service: |
|||
<pre> |
<pre> |
||
[Unit] |
|||
MAILTO=root@csclub.uwaterloo.ca |
|||
Description=Postgres backup (%i) |
|||
Documentation=https://wiki.csclub.uwaterloo.ca/PostgreSQL#Backups |
|||
[Service] |
|||
Type=oneshot |
|||
User=postgres |
|||
⚫ | |||
[Unit] |
|||
OnFailure=csc-email-on-failure@%n.service |
|||
</pre> |
|||
Paste the following into /etc/systemd/system/postgres-backup-full.timer: |
|||
<pre> |
|||
[Unit] |
|||
Description=Postgres backup (full) |
|||
[Timer] |
|||
# Full back up at 00:15 every Sunday and Wednesday |
# Full back up at 00:15 every Sunday and Wednesday |
||
OnCalendar=Sun,Wed *-*-* 00:15:00 |
|||
15 0 * * 0,3 postgres chronic ~/bin/pgbackrest-wrapper.sh --stanza=main backup --type=full |
|||
Unit=postgres-backup@full.service |
|||
Persistent=true |
|||
[Install] |
|||
WantedBy=timers.target |
|||
</pre> |
|||
Paste the following into /etc/systemd/system/postgres-backup-diff.timer: |
|||
<pre> |
|||
[Unit] |
|||
Description=Postgres backup (diff) |
|||
[Timer] |
|||
# Differential backup at 00:30 every day |
# Differential backup at 00:30 every day |
||
OnCalendar=*-*-* 00:30:00 |
|||
⚫ | |||
Unit=postgres-backup@diff.service |
|||
Persistent=true |
|||
[Install] |
|||
WantedBy=timers.target |
|||
</pre> |
|||
Paste the following into /etc/systemd/system/postgres-backup-incr.timer: |
|||
<pre> |
|||
[Unit] |
|||
Description=Postgres backup (incr) |
|||
[Timer] |
|||
# Incremental backup at the 45th minute of every hour |
# Incremental backup at the 45th minute of every hour |
||
OnCalendar=*-*-* *:45:00 |
|||
45 * * * * postgres chronic ~/bin/pgbackrest-wrapper.sh --stanza=main backup --type=incr |
|||
Unit=postgres-backup@incr.service |
|||
Persistent=true |
|||
[Install] |
|||
WantedBy=timers.target |
|||
</pre> |
|||
Finally, enable and start the timers: |
|||
<pre> |
|||
systemctl daemon-reload |
|||
systemctl enable --now postgres-backup-full.timer |
|||
systemctl enable --now postgres-backup-diff.timer |
|||
systemctl enable --now postgres-backup-incr.timer |
|||
</pre> |
</pre> |
||
Latest revision as of 09:47, 30 March 2024
For members
PostgreSQL is available as a service for members on caffeine. Just run ceo postgresql create
to create a new database for your account. As of this writing, club reps cannot create PostgreSQL databases for their clubs via ceo, so they will need to send an email to syscom instead.
For syscom
We are also running a Postgres database on coffee, which is not available to members. Any software installed by syscom should use this database instead of the one on caffeine.
Creating a database manually on caffeine
See how ceo does it.
Upgrades
Upgrading Postgres is more difficult than upgrading MySQL; when you upgrade the Debian version on a machine, a newer version of Postgres will be installed but the old version will remain and the data will not be migrated. You are responsible for manually upgrading the database yourself on all machines where Postgres is installed (currently, just coffee and caffeine).
Here's the Debian-specific way to do it (steps adapted from here). In the example below, we will assume that we are upgrading from Postgres 13 to 15.
-
First, take a full backup of the database. DO NOT SKIP THIS STEP.
pg_dumpall | xz -T0 > dump.sql.xz
-
Drop the new database, which should be empty at this point. Make sure that you are not dropping the old database instead! You can run
pg_lsclusters
to see which database versions are present.# Make sure that this is the NEW version, not the old version! pg_dropcluster --stop 15 main
-
Upgrade the cluster:
pg_upgradecluster -v 15 13 main
-
Run psql and make sure that the databases are present:
su - postgres -c psql \l \q
-
Once we are sure that everything is working, drop the old database:
# Make sure that this is the OLD version, not the new version! pg_dropcluster --stop 13
-
It is now safe to purge the old postgres package:
apt purge postgresql-13
Backups
We use pgBackRest for Postgres backups. It has already been installed on coffee and caffeine.
Installation
In the example below, we will be installing pgbackrest on coffee, and using corn-syrup to store the backups (via SSH).
The pgbackrest package in bookworm is too old and doesn't support SFTP, so we're going to download the packages we need from trixie instead (starting from trixie and higher, this should no longer be necessary):
# On coffee wget http://mirror.csclub.uwaterloo.ca/debian/pool/main/p/pgbackrest/pgbackrest_2.48-1_amd64.deb wget http://mirror.csclub.uwaterloo.ca/debian/pool/main/libz/libzstd/libzstd1_1.5.5+dfsg2-2_amd64.deb apt install ./pgbackrest_2.48-1_amd64.deb ./libzstd1_1.5.5+dfsg2-2_amd64.deb
Switch to the postgres user and create a new SSH key:
su - postgres ssh-keygen -t ed25519
Login to corn-syrup, switch to the syscom user, and paste the public key you created earlier into ~/.ssh/authorized_keys:
restrict ssh-ed25519 AAAAC3Nza... postgres@coffee
Create a folder to store the backups:
mkdir ~/backups/coffee/pgbackrest
Next, on coffee, paste something like the following into /etc/pgbackrest.conf. Make sure to adjust repo1-path and pg1-path.
[global] repo1-retention-full=2 repo1-retention-diff=4 repo1-bundle=y repo1-type=sftp repo1-sftp-host=corn-syrup repo1-sftp-host-user=syscom repo1-path=/users/syscom/backups/coffee/pgbackrest repo1-sftp-private-key-file=/var/lib/postgresql/.ssh/id_ed25519 repo1-sftp-public-key-file=/var/lib/postgresql/.ssh/id_ed25519.pub repo1-sftp-host-key-hash-type=sha256 repo1-sftp-host-key-check-type=none start-fast=y log-level-console=info process-max=4 compress-type=zst [main] pg1-path=/var/lib/postgresql/15/main
The config above will keep two full backups and at least four differential backups. See https://pgbackrest.org/user-guide.html#retention for more details.
Next, open /etc/postgresql/15/main/postgresql.conf and add/edit the following lines:
archive_mode = on archive_command = 'pgbackrest --stanza=main archive-push %p'
See https://pgbackrest.org/user-guide.html#quickstart/configure-archiving for more details.
Next, restart Postgres:
systemctl restart postgresql@15-main
Switch to the postgres user, create the main stanza, and run the first backup:
su - postgres pgbackrest --stanza=main stanza-create pgbackrest --stanza=main check pgbackrest --stanza=main backup --type=full
Upgrades
Normally, whenever you upgrade Postgres, you have to manually edit /etc/pgbackrest.conf and run the "stanza-upgrade" command. To make this easier for future sysadmins, I wrote a wrapper script around pgbackrest which does this automatically if it detects that Postgres was upgraded. Paste the following into /var/lib/postgresql/bin/pgbackrest-wrapper.sh and make it executable:
#!/bin/bash set -ex if [ "$(id -un)" != postgres ]; then echo "This script should run as the postgres user" >&2 exit 1 fi # Use the full path to ls to avoid bash aliases mapfile -t pg_versions < <(/bin/ls -1 /var/lib/postgresql | grep -P '^\d+$') if [ ${#pg_versions[@]} -ne 1 ]; then echo "Expected to find 1 Postgres version, found ${#pg_versions[@]} instead: ${pg_versions[*]}" >&2 exit 1 fi pg_ver=${pg_versions[0]} mapfile -t pgbr_versions < <(grep -oP '/var/lib/postgresql/\K(\d+)' /etc/pgbackrest.conf) if [ ${#pgbr_versions[@]} -ne 1 ]; then echo "Expected to find 1 pgBackRest folder, found ${#pgbr_versions[@]} instead: ${pgbr_versions[*]}" >&2 exit 1 fi pgbr_ver=${pgbr_versions[0]} if [ $pg_ver -eq $pgbr_ver ]; then # pgbackrest.conf is up to date, so just run the backup normally pgbackrest "$@" exit 0 elif [ $pg_ver -lt $pgbr_ver ]; then echo "pgBackRest does not support downgrades - you will have to fix this manually" >&2 exit 1 fi # sed -i needs to create a temporary file, and the postgres user doesn't have # write permissions on /etc, so write to a temporary file first sed "s,/var/lib/postgresql/$pgbr_ver,/var/lib/postgresql/$pg_ver," /etc/pgbackrest.conf > /tmp/pgbackrest.conf cp /tmp/pgbackrest.conf /etc/pgbackrest.conf rm /tmp/pgbackrest.conf pgbackrest --stanza=main stanza-upgrade pgbackrest --stanza=main check # Run the backup pgbackrest "$@"
Now we can just pass pgbackrest parameters directly to this script, e.g. pgbackrest-wrapper.sh --stanza=main backup
.
Cron
We are going to use systemd timers because they are much nicer to use than cron. Install /usr/local/bin/csc-systemd-email and /etc/systemd/system/csc-email-on-failure@.service on the target machine so that we get emails for failed jobs (there should be a copy of this on caffeine).
Paste the following into /etc/systemd/system/postgres-backup@.service:
[Unit] Description=Postgres backup (%i) Documentation=https://wiki.csclub.uwaterloo.ca/PostgreSQL#Backups [Service] Type=oneshot User=postgres ExecStart=/var/lib/postgresql/bin/pgbackrest-wrapper.sh --stanza=main backup --type=%i [Unit] OnFailure=csc-email-on-failure@%n.service
Paste the following into /etc/systemd/system/postgres-backup-full.timer:
[Unit] Description=Postgres backup (full) [Timer] # Full back up at 00:15 every Sunday and Wednesday OnCalendar=Sun,Wed *-*-* 00:15:00 Unit=postgres-backup@full.service Persistent=true [Install] WantedBy=timers.target
Paste the following into /etc/systemd/system/postgres-backup-diff.timer:
[Unit] Description=Postgres backup (diff) [Timer] # Differential backup at 00:30 every day OnCalendar=*-*-* 00:30:00 Unit=postgres-backup@diff.service Persistent=true [Install] WantedBy=timers.target
Paste the following into /etc/systemd/system/postgres-backup-incr.timer:
[Unit] Description=Postgres backup (incr) [Timer] # Incremental backup at the 45th minute of every hour OnCalendar=*-*-* *:45:00 Unit=postgres-backup@incr.service Persistent=true [Install] WantedBy=timers.target
Finally, enable and start the timers:
systemctl daemon-reload systemctl enable --now postgres-backup-full.timer systemctl enable --now postgres-backup-diff.timer systemctl enable --now postgres-backup-incr.timer
Restore
Suppose we want to restore the latest backup, and the installed Postgres is 15. First, make sure that you actually have at least one backup present for this version:
su -c postgres -c 'pgbackrest --stanza=main info'
Next, stop the database and delete all of the files:
systemctl stop postgresql@15-main rm -rf /var/lib/postgresql/15/main/*
Now switch to the postgres user and run the "restore" command:
su - postgres pgbackrest --stanza=main restore
If you start Postgres, everything should be in a working state:
systemctl start postgresql@15-main
If you want to restore a backup which is not the latest version, pass the --set
argument to pgbackrest. See https://pgbackrest.org/user-guide.html#restore for more details.