KubeBlocks
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Overview
Quickstart

Operations

Lifecycle Management
Vertical Scaling
Horizontal Scaling
Volume Expansion
Manage RabbitMQ Services
Decommission RabbitMQ Replica

Monitoring

Observability for RabbitMQ Clusters

tpl

  1. Prerequisites
  2. Deploy a RabbitMQ Cluster
  3. Verifying the Deployment
  4. Cluster Lifecycle Operations
    1. Stopping the Cluster
    2. Verifying Cluster Stop
    3. Starting the Cluster
    4. Verifying Cluster Start
    5. Restarting Cluster
  5. Summary

RabbitMQ Cluster Lifecycle Management

This guide demonstrates how to manage a RabbitMQ Cluster's operational state in KubeBlocks, including:

  • Stopping the cluster to conserve resources
  • Starting a stopped cluster
  • Restarting cluster components

These operations help optimize resource usage and reduce operational costs in Kubernetes environments.

Lifecycle management operations in KubeBlocks:

OperationEffectUse Case
StopSuspends cluster, retains storageCost savings, maintenance
StartResumes cluster operationRestore service after pause
RestartRecreates pods for componentConfiguration changes, troubleshooting

Prerequisites

    Before proceeding, ensure the following:

    • Environment Setup:
      • A Kubernetes cluster is up and running.
      • The kubectl CLI tool is configured to communicate with your cluster.
      • KubeBlocks CLI and KubeBlocks Operator are installed. Follow the installation instructions here.
    • Namespace Preparation: To keep resources isolated, create a dedicated namespace for this tutorial:
    kubectl create ns demo
    namespace/demo created
    

    Deploy a RabbitMQ Cluster

      KubeBlocks uses a declarative approach for managing RabbitMQ Clusters. Below is an example configuration for deploying a RabbitMQ Cluster with 3 replicas.

      Apply the following YAML configuration to deploy the cluster:

      apiVersion: apps.kubeblocks.io/v1
      kind: Cluster
      metadata:
        name: rabbitmq-cluster
        namespace: demo
      spec:
        terminationPolicy: Delete
        clusterDef: rabbitmq
        topology: clustermode
        componentSpecs:
          - name: rabbitmq
            serviceVersion: 3.13.7
            replicas: 3
            resources:
              limits:
                cpu: "0.5"
                memory: "0.5Gi"
              requests:
                cpu: "0.5"
                memory: "0.5Gi"
            volumeClaimTemplates:
              - name: data
                spec:
                  storageClassName: ""
                  accessModes:
                    - ReadWriteOnce
                  resources:
                    requests:
                      storage: 20Gi
      

      Verifying the Deployment

        Monitor the cluster status until it transitions to the Running state:

        kubectl get cluster rabbitmq-cluster -n demo -w
        

        Expected Output:

        kubectl get cluster rabbitmq-cluster -n demo
        NAME               CLUSTER-DEFINITION   TERMINATION-POLICY   STATUS     AGE
        rabbitmq-cluster   rabbitmq             Delete               Creating   15s
        rabbitmq-cluster   rabbitmq             Delete               Running    83s
        

        Check the pod status and roles:

        kubectl get pods -l app.kubernetes.io/instance=rabbitmq-cluster -n demo
        

        Expected Output:

        NAME                          READY   STATUS    RESTARTS   AGE
        rabbitmq-cluster-rabbitmq-0   2/2     Running   0          106s
        rabbitmq-cluster-rabbitmq-1   2/2     Running   0          82s
        rabbitmq-cluster-rabbitmq-2   2/2     Running   0          47s
        

        Once the cluster status becomes Running, your RabbitMQ cluster is ready for use.

        TIP

        If you are creating the cluster for the very first time, it may take some time to pull images before running.

        Cluster Lifecycle Operations

        Stopping the Cluster

        Stopping a RabbitMQ Cluster in KubeBlocks will:

        1. Terminates all running pods
        2. Retains persistent storage (PVCs)
        3. Maintains cluster configuration

        This operation is ideal for:

        • Temporary cost savings
        • Maintenance windows
        • Development environment pauses

        Option 1: OpsRequest API

        Create a Stop operation request:

        apiVersion: operations.kubeblocks.io/v1alpha1
        kind: OpsRequest
        metadata:
          name: rabbitmq-cluster-stop-ops
          namespace: demo
        spec:
          clusterName: rabbitmq-cluster
          type: Stop
        

        Option 2: Cluster API Patch

        Modify the cluster spec directly by patching the stop field:

        kubectl patch cluster rabbitmq-cluster -n demo --type='json' -p='[
        {
          "op": "add",
          "path": "/spec/componentSpecs/0/stop",
          "value": true
        }
        ]'
        

        Verifying Cluster Stop

        To confirm a successful stop operation:

        1. Check cluster status transition:

          kubectl get cluster rabbitmq-cluster -n demo -w
          

          Example Output:

          NAME               CLUSTER-DEFINITION    TERMINATION-POLICY   STATUS     AGE
          rabbitmq-cluster   rabbitmq              Delete               Stopping   6m3s
          rabbitmq-cluster   rabbitmq              Delete               Stopped    6m55s
          
        2. Verify no running pods:

          kubectl get pods -l app.kubernetes.io/instance=rabbitmq-cluster -n demo
          

          Example Output:

          No resources found in demo namespace.
          
        3. Confirm persistent volumes remain:

          kubectl get pvc -l app.kubernetes.io/instance=rabbitmq-cluster -n demo
          

          Example Output:

          NAME                               STATUS   VOLUME     CAPACITY   ACCESS MODES   STORAGECLASS         VOLUMEATTRIBUTESCLASS   AGE
          data-rabbitmq-cluster-rabbitmq-0   Bound    pvc-uuid   20Gi       RWO            <STORAGECLASS>       <unset>                 22m
          data-rabbitmq-cluster-rabbitmq-1   Bound    pvc-uuid   20Gi       RWO            <STORAGECLASS>       <unset>                 21m
          data-rabbitmq-cluster-rabbitmq-2   Bound    pvc-uuid   20Gi       RWO            <STORAGECLASS>       <unset>                 21m
          

        Starting the Cluster

        Starting a stopped RabbitMQ Cluster:

        1. Recreates all pods
        2. Reattaches persistent storage
        3. Restores service endpoints

        Expected behavior:

        • Cluster returns to previous state
        • No data loss occurs
        • Services resume automatically

        Initiate a Start operation request:

        apiVersion: operations.kubeblocks.io/v1alpha1
        kind: OpsRequest
        metadata:
          name: rabbitmq-cluster-start-ops
          namespace: demo
        spec:
          # Specifies the name of the Cluster resource that this operation is targeting.
          clusterName: rabbitmq-cluster
          type: Start
        

        Modify the cluster spec to resume operation:

        1. Set stop: false, or
        2. Remove the stop field entirely
          kubectl patch cluster rabbitmq-cluster -n demo --type='json' -p='[
          {
            "op": "remove",
            "path": "/spec/componentSpecs/0/stop"
          }
          ]'
          

        Verifying Cluster Start

        To confirm a successful start operation:

        1. Check cluster status transition:

          kubectl get cluster rabbitmq-cluster -n demo -w
          

          Example Output:

          NAME               CLUSTER-DEFINITION     TERMINATION-POLICY   STATUS     AGE
          rabbitmq-cluster   rabbitmq               Delete               Updating   24m
          rabbitmq-cluster   rabbitmq               Delete               Running    24m
          rabbitmq-cluster   rabbitmq               Delete               Running    24m
          
        2. Verify pod recreation:

          kubectl get pods -n demo -l app.kubernetes.io/instance=rabbitmq-cluster
          

          Example Output:

          NAME                          READY   STATUS    RESTARTS   AGE
          rabbitmq-cluster-rabbitmq-0   2/2     Running   0          55s
          rabbitmq-cluster-rabbitmq-1   2/2     Running   0          44s
          rabbitmq-cluster-rabbitmq-2   2/2     Running   0          33s
          

        Restarting Cluster

        Restart operations provide:

        • Pod recreation without full cluster stop
        • Component-level granularity
        • Minimal service disruption

        Use cases:

        • Configuration changes requiring restart
        • Resource refresh
        • Troubleshooting

        Using OpsRequest API

        Target specific components rabbitmq for restart:

        apiVersion: operations.kubeblocks.io/v1alpha1
        kind: OpsRequest
        metadata:
          name: rabbitmq-cluster-restart-ops
          namespace: demo
        spec:
          clusterName: rabbitmq-cluster
          type: Restart
          restart:
          - componentName: rabbitmq
        

        Verifying Restart Completion

        To verify a successful component restart:

        1. Track OpsRequest progress:

          kubectl get opsrequest rabbitmq-cluster-restart-ops -n demo -w
          

          Example Output:

          NAME                           TYPE      CLUSTER            STATUS    PROGRESS   AGE
          rabbitmq-cluster-restart-ops   Restart   rabbitmq-cluster   Running   0/3        4s
          rabbitmq-cluster-restart-ops   Restart   rabbitmq-cluster   Running   1/3        28s
          rabbitmq-cluster-restart-ops   Restart   rabbitmq-cluster   Running   2/3        56s
          rabbitmq-cluster-restart-ops   Restart   rabbitmq-cluster   Running   2/3        109s
          
        2. Check pod status:

          kubectl get pods -n demo -l app.kubernetes.io/instance=rabbitmq-cluster
          

          Note: Pods will show new creation timestamps after restart

        3. Verify component health:

          kbcli cluster describe rabbitmq-cluster -n demo
          

        Once the operation is complete, the cluster will return to the Running state.

        Summary

        In this guide, you learned how to:

        1. Stop a RabbitMQ Cluster to suspend operations while retaining persistent storage.
        2. Start a stopped cluster to bring it back online.
        3. Restart specific cluster components to recreate their Pods without stopping the entire cluster.

        By managing the lifecycle of your RabbitMQ Cluster, you can optimize resource utilization, reduce costs, and maintain flexibility in your Kubernetes environment. KubeBlocks provides a seamless way to perform these operations, ensuring high availability and minimal disruption.

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