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Quick Start Guides

Table of Contents

Prerequisites

  1. Kubernetes instance with the following version considerations:
    1. clickhouse-operator versions before 0.16.0 is compatible with Kubenetes after 1.16 and prior 1.22.
    2. clickhouse-operator versions 0.16.0 and after is compatible Kubernetes version 1.16 and after.
  2. Properly configured kubectl
  3. curl

ClickHouse Operator Installation

Apply clickhouse-operator installation manifest. The simplest way - directly from github.

In case you are convenient to install operator into kube-system namespace

just run:

kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Altinity/clickhouse-operator/master/deploy/operator/clickhouse-operator-install-bundle.yaml

If you want to install operator on kubernetes version prior 1.17 in kube-system namespace

just run:

kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Altinity/clickhouse-operator/master/deploy/operator/clickhouse-operator-install-bundle-v1beta1.yaml

In case you'd like to customize installation parameters,

such as namespace where to install operator or operator's image, use the special installer script.

curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Altinity/clickhouse-operator/master/deploy/operator-web-installer/clickhouse-operator-install.sh | OPERATOR_NAMESPACE=test-clickhouse-operator bash

Take into account explicitly specified namespace

OPERATOR_NAMESPACE=test-clickhouse-operator

This namespace would be created and used to install clickhouse-operator into. Install script would download some .yaml and .xml files and install clickhouse-operator into specified namespace. After installation clickhouse-operator will watch custom resources like a kind: ClickhouseInstallation only in test-clickhouse-operator namespace.

If no OPERATOR_NAMESPACE specified, as:

cd ~
curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Altinity/clickhouse-operator/master/deploy/operator-web-installer/clickhouse-operator-install.sh | bash

installer will install clickhouse-operator into kube-system namespace and will watch custom resources like a kind: ClickhouseInstallation in all available namespaces.

In case you can not run scripts from internet in your protected environment,

you can download manually this template file and edit it according to your choice. After that apply it with kubectl. Or you can use this snippet instead:

# Namespace to install operator into
OPERATOR_NAMESPACE="${OPERATOR_NAMESPACE:-test-clickhouse-operator}"
# Namespace to install metrics-exporter into
METRICS_EXPORTER_NAMESPACE="${OPERATOR_NAMESPACE}"

# Operator's docker image
OPERATOR_IMAGE="${OPERATOR_IMAGE:-altinity/clickhouse-operator:latest}"
# Metrics exporter's docker image
METRICS_EXPORTER_IMAGE="${METRICS_EXPORTER_IMAGE:-altinity/metrics-exporter:latest}"

# Setup clickhouse-operator into specified namespace
kubectl apply --namespace="${OPERATOR_NAMESPACE}" -f <( \
    curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Altinity/clickhouse-operator/master/deploy/operator/clickhouse-operator-install-template.yaml | \
        OPERATOR_IMAGE="${OPERATOR_IMAGE}" \
        OPERATOR_NAMESPACE="${OPERATOR_NAMESPACE}" \
        METRICS_EXPORTER_IMAGE="${METRICS_EXPORTER_IMAGE}" \
        METRICS_EXPORTER_NAMESPACE="${METRICS_EXPORTER_NAMESPACE}" \
        envsubst \
)

Operator installation process

Setup ClickHouse Operator into test-clickhouse-operator namespace
namespace/test-clickhouse-operator created
customresourcedefinition.apiextensions.k8s.io/clickhouseinstallations.clickhouse.altinity.com configured
serviceaccount/clickhouse-operator created
clusterrolebinding.rbac.authorization.k8s.io/clickhouse-operator configured
service/clickhouse-operator-metrics created
configmap/etc-clickhouse-operator-files created
configmap/etc-clickhouse-operator-confd-files created
configmap/etc-clickhouse-operator-configd-files created
configmap/etc-clickhouse-operator-templatesd-files created
configmap/etc-clickhouse-operator-usersd-files created
deployment.apps/clickhouse-operator created

Check clickhouse-operator is running:

kubectl get pods -n test-clickhouse-operator
NAME                                 READY   STATUS    RESTARTS   AGE
clickhouse-operator-5ddc6d858f-drppt 1/1     Running   0          1m

Building ClickHouse Operator from Sources

Complete instructions on how to build ClickHouse operator from sources as well as how to build a docker image and use it inside kubernetes described here.

Examples

There are several ready-to-use ClickHouseInstallation examples. Below are few ones to start with.

Create Custom Namespace

It is a good practice to have all components run in dedicated namespaces. Let's run examples in test namespace

kubectl create namespace test-clickhouse-operator
namespace/test created

Trivial example

This is the trivial 1 shard 1 replica example.

WARNING: Do not use it for anything other than 'Hello, world!', it does not have persistent storage!

kubectl apply -n test-clickhouse-operator -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Altinity/clickhouse-operator/master/docs/chi-examples/01-simple-layout-01-1shard-1repl.yaml
clickhouseinstallation.clickhouse.altinity.com/simple-01 created

Installation specification is straightforward and defines 1-replica cluster:

apiVersion: "clickhouse.altinity.com/v1"
kind: "ClickHouseInstallation"
metadata:
  name: "simple-01"
spec:
  configuration:
    clusters:
      - name: "simple"

Once cluster is created, there are two checks to be made.

kubectl get pods -n test-clickhouse-operator
NAME                    READY   STATUS    RESTARTS   AGE
chi-b3d29f-a242-0-0-0   1/1     Running   0          10m

Watch out for 'Running' status. Also check services created by an operator:

kubectl get service -n test-clickhouse-operator
NAME                    TYPE           CLUSTER-IP       EXTERNAL-IP                          PORT(S)                         AGE
chi-b3d29f-a242-0-0     ClusterIP      None             <none>                               8123/TCP,9000/TCP,9009/TCP      11m
clickhouse-example-01   LoadBalancer   100.64.167.170   abc-123.us-east-1.elb.amazonaws.com   8123:30954/TCP,9000:32697/TCP   11m

ClickHouse is up and running!

Connect to ClickHouse Database

There are two ways to connect to ClickHouse database

  1. In case previous command kubectl get service -n test-clickhouse-operator reported EXTERNAL-IP (abc-123.us-east-1.elb.amazonaws.com in our case) we can directly access ClickHouse with:
clickhouse-client -h abc-123.us-east-1.elb.amazonaws.com -u clickhouse_operator --password clickhouse_operator_password 
ClickHouse client version 18.14.12.
Connecting to abc-123.us-east-1.elb.amazonaws.com:9000.
Connected to ClickHouse server version 19.4.3 revision 54416.
  1. In case there is not EXTERNAL-IP available, we can access ClickHouse from inside Kubernetes cluster
kubectl -n test-clickhouse-operator exec -it chi-b3d29f-a242-0-0-0 -- clickhouse-client
ClickHouse client version 19.4.3.11.
Connecting to localhost:9000 as user default.
Connected to ClickHouse server version 19.4.3 revision 54416.

Simple Persistent Volume Example

In case of having Dynamic Volume Provisioning available - ex.: running on AWS - we are able to use PersistentVolumeClaims Manifest is available in examples

apiVersion: "clickhouse.altinity.com/v1"
kind: "ClickHouseInstallation"
metadata:
  name: "pv-simple"
spec:
  defaults:
    templates:
      dataVolumeClaimTemplate: data-volume-template
      logVolumeClaimTemplate: log-volume-template
  configuration:
    clusters:
      - name: "simple"
        layout:
          shardsCount: 1
          replicasCount: 1
  templates:
    volumeClaimTemplates:
      - name: data-volume-template
        spec:
          accessModes:
            - ReadWriteOnce
          resources:
            requests:
              storage: 1Gi
      - name: log-volume-template
        spec:
          accessModes:
            - ReadWriteOnce
          resources:
            requests:
              storage: 100Mi

Custom Deployment with Pod and VolumeClaim Templates

Let's install more complex example with:

  1. Deployment specified
  2. Pod template
  3. VolumeClaim template

Manifest is available in examples

apiVersion: "clickhouse.altinity.com/v1"
kind: "ClickHouseInstallation"
metadata:
  name: "pv-log"
spec:
  configuration:
    clusters:
      - name: "deployment-pv"
        # Templates are specified for this cluster explicitly
        templates:
          podTemplate: pod-template-with-volumes
        layout:
          shardsCount: 2
          replicasCount: 2

  templates:
    podTemplates:
      - name: pod-template-with-volumes
        spec:
          containers:
            - name: clickhouse
              image: clickhouse/clickhouse-server:22.3
              volumeMounts:
                - name: data-storage-vc-template
                  mountPath: /var/lib/clickhouse
                - name: log-storage-vc-template
                  mountPath: /var/log/clickhouse-server

    volumeClaimTemplates:
      - name: data-storage-vc-template
        spec:
          accessModes:
            - ReadWriteOnce
          resources:
            requests:
              storage: 3Gi
      - name: log-storage-vc-template
        spec:
          accessModes:
            - ReadWriteOnce
          resources:
            requests:
              storage: 2Gi

Custom Deployment with Specific ClickHouse Configuration

You can tell the operator to configure your ClickHouse, as shown in the example below (link to the manifest):

apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
  name: clickhouse-credentials
type: Opaque
stringData:
  testpwduser1: password
  testpwduser2: 65e84be33532fb784c48129675f9eff3a682b27168c0ea744b2cf58ee02337c5
  testpwduser3: 8bd66e4932b4968ec111da24d7e42d399a05cb90bf96f587c3fa191c56c401f8
---
apiVersion: "clickhouse.altinity.com/v1"
kind: "ClickHouseInstallation"
metadata:
  name: "settings-01"
spec:
  configuration:
    users:
      # test user has 'password' specified, while admin user has 'password_sha256_hex' specified
      test/password: qwerty
      test/networks/ip:
        - "127.0.0.1/32"
        - "192.168.74.1/24"
      test/profile: test_profile
      test/quota: test_quota
      test/allow_databases/database:
        - "dbname1"
        - "dbname2"
        - "dbname3"
      # reference to namespace/name/field in the secret with plain password
      testpwduser1/k8s_secret_password: dev/clickhouse-credentials/testpwduser1
      # reference to the same namespace as operator is running in/name/field in the secret with sha256 password
      testpwduser2/k8s_secret_password_sha256_hex: clickhouse-credentials/testpwduser2
      testpwduser3/k8s_secret_password_double_sha1_hex: clickhouse-credentials/testpwduser3
      # admin use has 'password_sha256_hex' so actual password value is not published
      admin/password_sha256_hex: 8bd66e4932b4968ec111da24d7e42d399a05cb90bf96f587c3fa191c56c401f8
      admin/networks/ip: "127.0.0.1/32"
      admin/profile: default
      admin/quota: default
      # readonly user has 'password' field specified, not 'password_sha256_hex' as admin user above
      readonly/password: readonly_password
      readonly/profile: readonly
      readonly/quota: default
    profiles:
      test_profile/max_memory_usage: 1000000000
      test_profile/readonly: 1
      readonly/readonly: 1
    quotas:
      test_quota/interval/duration: 3600
    settings:
      compression/case/method: zstd
      disable_internal_dns_cache: 1
    files:
      dict1.xml: |
        <yandex>
            <!-- ref to file /etc/clickhouse-data/config.d/source1.csv -->
        </yandex>
      source1.csv: |
        a1,b1,c1,d1
        a2,b2,c2,d2
    clusters:
      - name: "standard"
        layout:
          shardsCount: 1
          replicasCount: 1