KubeBlocks
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Manage StarRocks with KubeBlocks
  1. Before you start
  2. Create a cluster
  3. Scale
    1. Scale vertically
      1. Before you start
      2. Steps
    2. Scale horizontally
      1. Before you start
      2. Steps
  4. Volume expansion
    1. Before you start
    2. Steps
  5. Restart
  6. Stop/Start a cluster
    1. Stop a cluster
    2. Start a cluster
  7. Delete a cluster
    1. Termination policy
    2. Steps

Manage StarRocks with KubeBlocks

StarRocks is a next-gen, high-performance analytical data warehouse that enables real-time, multi-dimensional, and highly concurrent data analysis.

This tutorial illustrates how to create and manage a StarRocks cluster by kbcli, kubectl or a YAML file. You can find the YAML examples and guides in the GitHub repository.

Before you start

  • Install kbcli if you want to manage the StarRocks cluster with kbcli.

  • Install KubeBlocks.

  • Install and enable the starrocks Addon.

  • To keep things isolated, create a separate namespace called demo throughout this tutorial.

    kubectl create namespace demo
    

Create a cluster

KubeBlocks implements a Cluster CRD to define a cluster. Here is an example of creating a StarRocks cluster.

cat <<EOF | kubectl apply -f -
apiVersion: apps.kubeblocks.io/v1alpha1
kind: Cluster
metadata:
  name: mycluster
  namespace: demo
spec:
  clusterDefinitionRef: starrocks-ce
  terminationPolicy: Delete
  topology: shared-nothing
  tolerations:
    - key: kb-data
      operator: Equal
      value: 'true'
      effect: NoSchedule
  componentSpecs:
    - name: fe
      componentDef: starrocks-ce-fe
      serviceVersion: 3.3.0
      replicas: 1
      resources:
        limits:
          cpu: "1"
          memory: "1Gi"
        requests:
          cpu: "1"
          memory: "1Gi"
      volumeClaimTemplates:
        - name: data # ref clusterDefinition components.containers.volumeMounts.name
          spec:
            accessModes:
              - ReadWriteOnce
            resources:
              requests:
                storage: 20Gi
    - name: be
      componentDef: starrocks-ce-be
      serviceVersion: 3.3.0
      replicas: 1
      resources:
        limits:
          cpu: "1"
          memory: "1Gi"
        requests:
          cpu: "1"
          memory: "1Gi"
      volumeClaimTemplates:
      - name: data
        spec:
          accessModes:
          - ReadWriteOnce
          resources:
            requests:
              storage: "20Gi"
EOF
FieldDefinition
spec.clusterDefinitionRefIt specifies the name of the ClusterDefinition for creating a specific type of cluster.
spec.terminationPolicyIt is the policy of cluster termination. The default value is Delete. Valid values are DoNotTerminate, Delete, WipeOut. For the detailed definition, you can refer to Termination Policy.
spec.affinityIt defines a set of node affinity scheduling rules for the cluster's Pods. This field helps control the placement of Pods on nodes within the cluster.
spec.affinity.podAntiAffinityIt specifies the anti-affinity level of Pods within a component. It determines how pods should spread across nodes to improve availability and performance.
spec.affinity.topologyKeysIt represents the key of node labels used to define the topology domain for Pod anti-affinity and Pod spread constraints.
spec.tolerationsIt is an array that specifies tolerations attached to the cluster's Pods, allowing them to be scheduled onto nodes with matching taints.
spec.componentSpecsIt is the list of components that define the cluster components. This field allows customized configuration of each component within a cluster.
spec.componentSpecs.componentDefRefIt is the name of the component definition that is defined in the cluster definition and you can get the component definition names with kubectl get clusterdefinition starrocks -o json | jq '.spec.componentDefs[].name'.
spec.componentSpecs.nameIt specifies the name of the component.
spec.componentSpecs.replicasIt specifies the number of replicas of the component.
spec.componentSpecs.resourcesIt specifies the resource requirements of the component.

KubeBlocks operator watches for the Cluster CRD and creates the cluster and all dependent resources. You can get all the resources created by the cluster with kubectl get all,secret,rolebinding,serviceaccount -l app.kubernetes.io/instance=mycluster -n demo.

kubectl get all,secret,rolebinding,serviceaccount -l app.kubernetes.io/instance=mycluster -n demo

Run the following command to see the created StarRocks cluster object:

kubectl get cluster mycluster -n demo -o yaml

Steps

  1. Execute the following command to create a StarRocks cluster.

    kbcli cluster create mycluster --cluster-definition=starrocks -n demo
    

    You can also create a cluster with specified CPU, memory and storage values.

    kbcli cluster create mycluster --cluster-definition=starrocks --set cpu=1,memory=2Gi,storage=10Gi -n demo
    
NOTE

If you want to customize your cluster specifications, kbcli provides various options, such as setting cluster version, termination policy, CPU, and memory. You can view these options by adding --help or -h flag.

kbcli cluster create --help
kbcli cluster create -h
  1. Check whether the cluster is created successfully.

    kbcli cluster list -n demo
    >
    NAME        NAMESPACE   CLUSTER-DEFINITION   VERSION           TERMINATION-POLICY   STATUS     CREATED-TIME
    mycluster   demo        starrocks            starrocks-3.1.1   Delete               Running    Jul 17,2024 19:06 UTC+0800   
    
  2. Check the cluster information.

    kbcli cluster describe mycluster -n demo
    >
    Name: mycluster	 Created Time: Jul 17,2024 19:06 UTC+0800
    NAMESPACE   CLUSTER-DEFINITION   VERSION           STATUS    TERMINATION-POLICY
    demo        starrocks            starrocks-3.1.1   Running   Delete
    
    Endpoints:
    COMPONENT   MODE        INTERNAL                                      EXTERNAL
    fe          ReadWrite   mycluster-fe.default.svc.cluster.local:9030   <none>
    
    Topology:
    COMPONENT   INSTANCE         ROLE     STATUS    AZ       NODE                    CREATED-TIME
    be          mycluster-be-0   <none>   Running   <none>   minikube/192.168.49.2   Jul 17,2024 19:06 UTC+0800
    fe          mycluster-fe-0   <none>   Running   <none>   minikube/192.168.49.2   Jul 17,2024 19:06 UTC+0800
    
    Resources Allocation:
    COMPONENT   DEDICATED   CPU(REQUEST/LIMIT)   MEMORY(REQUEST/LIMIT)   STORAGE-SIZE   STORAGE-CLASS
    fe          false       1 / 1                1Gi / 1Gi               data:20Gi      standard
    be          false       1 / 1                1Gi / 1Gi               data:20Gi      standard
    
    Images:
    COMPONENT   TYPE   IMAGE
    fe          fe     apecloud-registry.cn-zhangjiakou.cr.aliyuncs.com/apecloud/fe-ubuntu:2.5.4
    be          be     apecloud-registry.cn-zhangjiakou.cr.aliyuncs.com/apecloud/fe-ubuntu:2.5.4
    
    Show cluster events: kbcli cluster list-events -n demo mycluster
    

Scale

Scale vertically

Before you start

Check whether the cluster status is Running. Otherwise, the following operations may fail.

kubectl get cluster mycluster -n demo
>
NAME        CLUSTER-DEFINITION   VERSION           TERMINATION-POLICY   STATUS    AGE
mycluster   starrocks            starrocks-3.1.1   Delete               Running   4m29s
kbcli cluster list mycluster -n demo
>
NAME        NAMESPACE   CLUSTER-DEFINITION   VERSION           TERMINATION-POLICY   STATUS        CREATED-TIME
mycluster   demo        starrocks            starrocks-3.1.1   Delete               Running       Jul 17,2024 19:06 UTC+0800

Steps

  1. Apply an OpsRequest to the specified cluster. Configure the parameters according to your needs.

    kubectl apply -f - <<EOF
    apiVersion: apps.kubeblocks.io/v1alpha1
    kind: OpsRequest
    metadata:
      name: mycluster-vertical-scaling
      namespace: demo
    spec:
      clusterName: mycluster
      type: VerticalScaling
      verticalScaling:
      - componentName: fe
        requests:
          memory: "2Gi"
          cpu: "1"
        limits:
          memory: "4Gi"
          cpu: "2"
    EOF
    
  2. Check the operation status to validate the vertical scaling.

    kubectl get ops -n demo
    >
    NAMESPACE   NAME                         TYPE              CLUSTER     STATUS    PROGRESS   AGE
    demo        mycluster-vertical-scaling   VerticalScaling   mycluster   Succeed   3/3        6m
    

    If an error occurs, you can troubleshoot with kubectl describe ops -n demo command to view the events of this operation.

  3. Check whether the corresponding resources change.

    kubectl describe cluster mycluster -n demo
    
  1. Change the configuration of spec.componentSpecs.resources in the YAML file. spec.componentSpecs.resources controls the requirement and limit of resources and changing them triggers a vertical scaling.

    kubectl edit cluster mycluster -n demo
    

    Edit the values of spec.componentSpecs.resources.

    ...
    spec:
      clusterDefinitionRef: starrocks-ce
      clusterVersionRef: starrocks-ce-3.1.1
      componentSpecs:
      - name: fe
        componentDefRef: fe
        replicas: 2
        resources: # Change the values of resources
          requests:
            memory: "2Gi"
            cpu: "1"
          limits:
            memory: "4Gi"
            cpu: "2"
    ...
    
  2. Check whether the corresponding resources change.

    kubectl describe cluster mycluster -n demo
    
  1. Set the --cpu and --memory values according to your needs and run the following command to perform vertical scaling.

    kbcli cluster vscale mycluster -n demo --cpu=2 --memory=20Gi --components=be
    

    Please wait a few seconds until the scaling process is over.

  2. Validate the vertical scaling operation.

    • View the OpsRequest progress.

      KubeBlocks outputs a command automatically for you to view the OpsRequest progress. The output includes the status of this OpsRequest and Pods. When the status is Succeed, this OpsRequest is completed.

      kbcli cluster describe-ops mycluster-verticalscaling-smx8b -n demo
      
    • Check the cluster status.

      kbcli cluster list mycluster -n demo
      >
      NAME        NAMESPACE   CLUSTER-DEFINITION   VERSION             TERMINATION-POLICY   STATUS     CREATED-TIME
      mycluster   demo        starrocks            starrocks-3.1.1     Delete               Updating   Jul 17,2024 19:06 UTC+0800
      
      • STATUS=Updating: it means the vertical scaling is in progress.
      • STATUS=Running: it means the vertical scaling operation has been applied.
      • STATUS=Abnormal: it means the vertical scaling is abnormal. The reason may be that the number of the normal instances is less than that of the total instance or the leader instance is running properly while others are abnormal.

        To solve the problem, you can manually check whether this error is caused by insufficient resources. Then if AutoScaling is supported by the Kubernetes cluster, the system recovers when there are enough resources. Otherwise, you can create enough resources and troubleshoot with kubectl describe command.

  3. After the OpsRequest status is Succeed or the cluster status is Running again, check whether the corresponding resources change.

    kbcli cluster describe mycluster -n demo
    

Scale horizontally

Horizontal scaling changes the amount of pods. For example, you can scale out replicas from three to five.

From v0.9.0, besides replicas, KubeBlocks also supports scaling in and out instances, refer to the Horizontal Scale tutorial for more details and examples.

Before you start

Check whether the cluster status is Running. Otherwise, the following operations may fail.

kubectl get cluster mycluster -n demo
>
NAME        CLUSTER-DEFINITION   VERSION           TERMINATION-POLICY   STATUS    AGE
mycluster   starrocks            starrocks-3.1.1   Delete               Running   4m29s
kbcli cluster list mycluster -n demo
>
NAME        NAMESPACE   CLUSTER-DEFINITION   VERSION           TERMINATION-POLICY   STATUS        CREATED-TIME
mycluster   demo        starrocks            starrocks-3.1.1   Delete               Running       Jul 17,2024 19:06 UTC+0800

Steps

  1. Apply an OpsRequest to a specified cluster. Configure the parameters according to your needs.

    The example below means adding two replicas for the component fe.

    kubectl apply -f - <<EOF
    apiVersion: apps.kubeblocks.io/v1alpha1
    kind: OpsRequest
    metadata:
      name: mycluster-horizontal-scaling
      namespace: demo
    spec:
      clusterName: mycluster
      type: HorizontalScaling
      horizontalScaling:
      - componentName: fe
        scaleOut:
          replicaChanges: 2
    EOF
    

    If you want to scale in replicas, replace scaleOut with scaleIn.

    The example below means deleting two replicas for the component fe.

    kubectl apply -f - <<EOF
    apiVersion: apps.kubeblocks.io/v1alpha1
    kind: OpsRequest
    metadata:
      name: mycluster-horizontal-scaling
      namespace: demo
    spec:
      clusterName: mycluster
      type: HorizontalScaling
      horizontalScaling:
      - componentName: fe
        scaleIn:
          replicaChanges: 2
    EOF
    
  2. Check the operation status to validate the horizontal scaling status.

    kubectl get ops -n demo
    >
    NAMESPACE   NAME                           TYPE                CLUSTER     STATUS    PROGRESS   AGE
    demo        mycluster-horizontal-scaling   HorizontalScaling   mycluster   Succeed   3/3        6m
    

    If an error occurs, you can troubleshoot with kubectl describe ops -n demo command to view the events of this operation.

  3. Check whether the corresponding resources change.

    kubectl describe cluster mycluster -n demo
    
  1. Change the configuration of spec.componentSpecs.replicas in the YAML file. spec.componentSpecs.replicas stands for the pod amount and changing this value triggers a horizontal scaling of a cluster.

    kubectl edit cluster mycluster -n demo
    

    Edit the values of spec.componentSpecs.replicas.

    ...
    spec:
      clusterDefinitionRef: starrocks-ce
      clusterVersionRef: starrocks-ce-3.1.1
      componentSpecs:
      - name: fe
        componentDefRef: fe
        replicas: 2 # Change this value
    ...
    
  2. Check whether the corresponding resources change.

    kubectl describe cluster mycluster -n demo
    
  1. Configure the parameters --components and --replicas, and run the command.

    kbcli cluster hscale mycluster --replicas=3 --components=be -n demo
    
    • --components describes the component name ready for horizontal scaling.
    • --replicas describes the replica amount of the specified components. Edit the amount based on your demands to scale in or out replicas.

    Please wait a few seconds until the scaling process is over.

  2. Validate the vertical scaling.

    • View the OpsRequest progress.

      KubeBlocks outputs a command automatically for you to view the OpsRequest progress. The output includes the status of this OpsRequest and Pods. When the status is Succeed, this OpsRequest is completed.

      kbcli cluster describe-ops mycluster-horizontalscaling-ffp9p -n demo
      
    • View the cluster status.

      kbcli cluster list mycluster -n demo
      
      • STATUS=Updating: it means horizontal scaling is in progress.
      • STATUS=Running: it means horizontal scaling has been applied.
  3. After the OpsRequest status is Succeed or the cluster status is Running again, check whether the corresponding resources change.

    kbcli cluster describe mycluster -n demo
    

Volume expansion

Before you start

Check whether the cluster status is Running. Otherwise, the following operations may fail.

kubectl get cluster mycluster -n demo
>
NAME        CLUSTER-DEFINITION   VERSION           TERMINATION-POLICY   STATUS    AGE
mycluster   starrocks            starrocks-3.1.1   Delete               Running   4m29s
kbcli cluster list mycluster -n demo
>
NAME        NAMESPACE   CLUSTER-DEFINITION   VERSION           TERMINATION-POLICY   STATUS        CREATED-TIME
mycluster   demo        starrocks            starrocks-3.1.1   Delete               Running       Jul 17,2024 19:06 UTC+0800

Steps

  1. Change the value of storage according to your need and run the command below to expand the volume of a cluster.

    kubectl apply -f - <<EOF
    apiVersion: apps.kubeblocks.io/v1alpha1
    kind: OpsRequest
    metadata:
      name: mycluster-volume-expansion
      namespace: demo
    spec:
      clusterName: mycluster
      type: VolumeExpansion
      volumeExpansion:
      - componentName: be
        volumeClaimTemplates:
        - name: be-storage
          storage: "40Gi"
    EOF
    
  2. Validate the volume expansion operation.

    kubectl get ops -n demo
    >
    NAMESPACE   NAME                         TYPE              CLUSTER     STATUS    PROGRESS   AGE
    demo        mycluster-volume-expansion   VolumeExpansion   mycluster   Succeed   3/3        6m
    

    If an error occurs, you can troubleshoot with kubectl describe ops -n demo command to view the events of this operation.

  3. Check whether the corresponding cluster resources change.

    kubectl describe cluster mycluster -n demo
    
  1. Change the value of spec.componentSpecs.volumeClaimTemplates.spec.resources in the cluster YAML file.

    spec.componentSpecs.volumeClaimTemplates.spec.resources is the storage resource information of the pod and changing this value triggers the volume expansion of a cluster.

    kubectl edit cluster mycluster -n demo
    

    Edit the values of spec.componentSpecs.volumeClaimTemplates.spec.resources.

    ...
    spec:
      clusterDefinitionRef: starrocks-ce
      clusterVersionRef: starrocks-ce-3.1.1
      componentSpecs:
      - name: be
        componentDefRef: be
        volumeClaimTemplates:
        - name: be-storage
          spec:
            accessModes:
              - ReadWriteOnce
            resources:
              requests:
                storage: 40Gi # Change the volume storage size
    ...
    
  2. Check whether the corresponding cluster resources change.

    kubectl describe cluster mycluster -n demo
    
  1. Set the --storage value according to your need and run the command to expand the volume.

    kbcli cluster volume-expand mycluster -n demo --storage=40Gi --components=be
    

    The volume expansion may take a few minutes.

  2. Validate the volume expansion operation.

    • View the OpsRequest progress.

      KubeBlocks outputs a command automatically for you to view the details of the OpsRequest progress. The output includes the status of this OpsRequest and PVC. When the status is Succeed, this OpsRequest is completed.

      kbcli cluster describe-ops mycluster-volumeexpansion-5pbd2 -n demo
      
    • View the cluster status.

      kbcli cluster list mycluster -n demo
      >
      NAME        NAMESPACE   CLUSTER-DEFINITION   VERSION           TERMINATION-POLICY   STATUS    CREATED-TIME
      mycluster   demo        starrocks            starrocks-3.1.1   Delete               Running   Jul 17,2024 19:06 UTC+0800
      
  3. After the OpsRequest status is Succeed or the cluster status is Running again, check whether the corresponding resources change.

    kbcli cluster describe mycluster -n demo
    

Restart

  1. Restart a cluster.

    kubectl apply -f - <<EOF
    apiVersion: apps.kubeblocks.io/v1alpha1
    kind: OpsRequest
    metadata:
      name: mycluster-restart
      namespace: demo
    spec:
      clusterName: mycluster
      type: Restart 
      restart:
      - componentName: be
    EOF
    
  2. Check the pod and operation status to validate the restarting.

    kubectl get pod -n demo
    
    kubectl get ops ops-restart -n demo
    

    During the restarting process, there are two status types for pods.

    • STATUS=Terminating: it means the cluster restart is in progress.
    • STATUS=Running: it means the cluster has been restarted.
  1. Configure the values of components and ttlSecondsAfterSucceed and run the command below to restart a specified cluster.

    kbcli cluster restart mycluster -n demo --components="starrocks" --ttlSecondsAfterSucceed=30
    
    • components describes the component name that needs to be restarted.
    • ttlSecondsAfterSucceed describes the time to live of an OpsRequest job after the restarting succeeds.
  2. Validate the restarting.

    Run the command below to check the cluster status to check the restarting status.

    kbcli cluster list mycluster -n demo
    >
    NAME        NAMESPACE   CLUSTER-DEFINITION     VERSION             TERMINATION-POLICY   STATUS    CREATED-TIME
    mycluster   demo        starrocks               starrocks-3.1.1    Delete               Running   Jul 17,2024 19:06 UTC+0800
    
    • STATUS=Updating: it means the cluster restart is in progress.
    • STATUS=Running: it means the cluster has been restarted.

Stop/Start a cluster

You can stop/start a cluster to save computing resources. When a cluster is stopped, the computing resources of this cluster are released, which means the pods of Kubernetes are released, but the storage resources are reserved. You can start this cluster again by snapshots if you want to restore the cluster resources.

Stop a cluster

  1. Configure the name of your cluster and run the command below to stop this cluster.

    Apply an OpsRequest to restart a cluster.

    kubectl apply -f - <<EOF
    apiVersion: apps.kubeblocks.io/v1alpha1
    kind: OpsRequest
    metadata:
      name: mycluster-stop
      namespace: demo
    spec:
      clusterName: mycluster
      type: Stop
    EOF
    
    kubectl edit cluster mycluster -n demo
    

    Configure replicas as 0 to delete pods.

    ...
    spec:
      clusterDefinitionRef: starrocks-ce
      clusterVersionRef: starrocks-ce-3.1.1
      terminationPolicy: Delete
      affinity:
        podAntiAffinity: Preferred
        topologyKeys:
        - kubernetes.io/hostname
      tolerations:
        - key: kb-data
          operator: Equal
          value: 'true'
          effect: NoSchedule
      componentSpecs:
      - name: fe
        componentDefRef: fe
        replicas: 0 # Change this value
      - name: be
        componentDefRef: be
        replicas: 0 # Change this value
    
    kbcli cluster stop mycluster -n demo
    
  2. Check the status of the cluster to see whether it is stopped.

    kubectl get cluster mycluster -n demo
    
    kbcli cluster list mycluster -n demo
    

Start a cluster

  1. Configure the name of your cluster and run the command below to start this cluster.

    Apply an OpsRequest to start a cluster.

    kubectl apply -f - <<EOF
    apiVersion: apps.kubeblocks.io/v1alpha1
    kind: OpsRequest
    metadata:
      name: ops-start
      namespace: demo
    spec:
      clusterName: mycluster
      type: Start
    EOF 
    
    kubectl edit cluster mycluster -n demo
    

    Change replicas back to the original amount to start this cluster again.

    spec:
      clusterDefinitionRef: starrocks-ce
      clusterVersionRef: starrocks-ce-3.1.1
      terminationPolicy: Delete
      affinity:
        podAntiAffinity: Preferred
        topologyKeys:
        - kubernetes.io/hostname
      tolerations:
        - key: kb-data
          operator: Equal
          value: 'true'
          effect: NoSchedule
      componentSpecs:
      - name: fe
        componentDefRef: fe
        replicas: 1 # Change this value
      - name: be
        componentDefRef: be
        replicas: 2 # Change this value
    
    kbcli cluster start mycluster -n demo
    
  2. Check the status of the cluster to see whether it is running again.

    kubectl get cluster mycluster -n demo
    
    kbcli cluster list mycluster -n demo
    

Delete a cluster

Termination policy

NOTE

The termination policy determines how a cluster is deleted.

terminationPolicyDeleting Operation
DoNotTerminateDoNotTerminate blocks delete operation.
HaltHalt deletes Cluster resources like Pods and Services but retains Persistent Volume Claims (PVCs), allowing for data preservation while stopping other operations. Halt policy is deprecated in v0.9.1 and will have same meaning as DoNotTerminate.
DeleteDelete extends the Halt policy by also removing PVCs, leading to a thorough cleanup while removing all persistent data.
WipeOutWipeOut deletes all Cluster resources, including volume snapshots and backups in external storage. This results in complete data removal and should be used cautiously, especially in non-production environments, to avoid irreversible data loss.

To check the termination policy, execute the following command.

kubectl get cluster mycluster -n demo
>
NAME        CLUSTER-DEFINITION   VERSION           TERMINATION-POLICY   STATUS    AGE
mycluster   starrocks            starrocks-3.1.1   Delete               Running   34m
kbcli cluster list mycluster -n demo
>
NAME        NAMESPACE   CLUSTER-DEFINITION     VERSION         TERMINATION-POLICY   STATUS    CREATED-TIME
mycluster   demo                                               Delete               Running   Sep 30,2024 13:03 UTC+0800 

Steps

Run the command below to delete a specified cluster.

If you want to delete a cluster and its all related resources, you can modify the termination policy to WipeOut, then delete the cluster.

kubectl patch -n demo cluster mycluster -p '{"spec":{"terminationPolicy":"WipeOut"}}' --type="merge"

kubectl delete -n demo cluster mycluster
kbcli cluster delete mycluster -n demo

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