Skip to content

galaxyproject/ansible-postgresql

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

69 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

PostgreSQL

An Ansible role for installing and managing PostgreSQL servers. This role works with both Debian and RedHat based systems, and provides backup scripts for PostgreSQL Continuous Archiving and Point-in-Time Recovery. It does not create or manage PostgreSQL users, roles, groups, databases, and so forth. For that, see galaxyproject.postgresql_objects.

On RedHat-based platforms, the PostgreSQL Global Development Group (PGDG) packages packages will be installed. On Debian-based platforms, you can choose from the distribution's packages (from APT) or the PGDG packages.

Changes that require a restart will not be applied unless you manually restart PostgreSQL. This role will reload the server for those configuration changes that can be updated with only a reload because reloading is a non-intrusive operation, but options that require a full restart will not cause the server to restart.

Requirements

This role requires Ansible 2.4+

Role Variables

All variables are optional

  • postgresql_user_name: System username to be used for PostgreSQL (default: postgres).

  • postgresql_version: PostgreSQL version to install. On Debian-based platforms, the default is whatever version is pointed to by the postgresql metapackage). On RedHat-based platforms, the default is 10.

  • postgresql_flavor: On Debian-based platforms, this specifies whether you want to use PostgreSQL packages from pgdg or the distribution's apt repositories. Possible values: apt, pgdg (default: apt).

  • postgresql_conf: A list of hashes (dictionaries) of postgresql.conf options (keys) and values. These options are not added to postgresql.conf directly - the role adds a conf.d subdirectory in the configuration directory and an include statement for that directory to postgresql.conf. Options set in postgresql_conf are then set in conf.d/25ansible_postgresql.conf. For legacy reasons, this can also be a single hash, but the list syntax is preferred because it preserves order.

    Due to YAML parsing, you must take care when defining values in postgresql_conf to ensure they are properly written to the config file. For example:

    postgresql_conf:
      - max_connections: 250
      - archive_mode: "off"
      - work_mem: "'8MB'"

    Becomes the following in 25ansible_postgresql.conf:

    max_connections = 250
    archive_mode = off
    work_mem: '8MB'
    
  • postgresql_pg_hba_conf: A list of lines to add to pg_hba.conf

  • postgresql_pg_hba_local_postgres_user: If set to false, this will remove the postgres user's entry from pg_hba.conf that is preconfigured on Debian-based PostgreSQL installations. You probably do not want to do this unless you know what you're doing.

  • postgresql_pg_hba_local_socket: If set to false, this will remove the local entry from pg_hba.conf that is preconfigured by the PostgreSQL package.

  • postgresql_pg_hba_local_ipv4: If set to false, this will remove the host ... 127.0.0.1/32 entry from pg_hba.conf that is preconfigured by the PostgreSQL package.

  • postgresql_pg_hba_local_ipv6: If set to false, this will remove the host ... ::1/128 entry from pg_hba.conf that is preconfigured by the PostgreSQL package.

  • postgresql_pgdata: Only set this if you have changed the $PGDATA directory from the package default. Note this does not configure PostgreSQL to actually use a different directory, you will need to do that yourself, it just allows the role to properly locate the directory.

  • postgresql_conf_dir: As with postgresql_pgdata except for the configuration directory.

  • postgresql_install_psycopg2: Attempt to install the correct pacakge providing psycopg2 to the Python interpreter that Ansible is using on the remote side. This allows for the use of the postgresql_* Ansible modules (perhaps via galaxyproject.postgresql_objects), which depend on psycopg2. Defaults to true.

Backups

  • postgresql_backup_dir: If set, enables PITR backups. Set this to a directory where your database will be backed up (this can be any format supported by rsync, e.g. user@host:/path). The most recent backup will be in a subdirectory named current.

  • postgresql_backup_local_dir: Filesystem path on the PostgreSQL server where backup scripts will be placed.

  • postgresql_backup_[hour|minute]: Controls what time the cron job will run to perform a full backup. Defaults to 1:00 AM.

  • postgresql_backup_[day|month|weekday]: Additional cron controls for when the full backup is performed (default: *).

  • postgresql_backup_post_command: Arbitrary command to run after successful completion of a scheduled backup.

Additional options pertaining to backups can be found in the defaults file.

Dependencies

Backup functionality requires Python 2.7 or 3.5+, psycopg2, and rsync. Note that if installing PGDG versions of PostgreSQL on Enterprise Linux, corresponding psycopg2 packages are available from the PGDG yum repositories.

Example Playbook

Standard install: Default postgresql.conf, pg_hba.conf and default version for the OS:

---

- hosts: dbservers
  remote_user: root
  roles:
    - postgresql

Use the pgdg packages on a Debian-based host:

---

- hosts: dbservers
  remote_user: root
  vars:
    postgresql_flavor: pgdg
  roles:
    - postgresql

Use the PostgreSQL 9.5 packages and set some postgresql.conf options and pg_hba.conf entries:

---

- hosts: dbservers
  remote_user: root
  vars:
    postgresql_version: 9.5
    postgresql_conf:
      - listen_addresses: "''"    # disable network listening (listen on unix socket only)
      - max_connections: 50       # decrease connection limit
    postgresql_pg_hba_conf:
      - host all all 10.0.0.0/8 md5
  roles:
    - postgresql

Enable backups to /archive

- hosts: all
  remote_user: root
  vars:
    postgresql_backup_dir: /archive
  roles:
    - postgresql

License

Academic Free License ("AFL") v. 3.0

Author Information

The Galaxy Community and contributors