Etcd Backup and Restore Controllers
Overview
Starting with version v2.17, KKP introduced experimental support for new etcd Backup and Restore controller based on the etcd-launcher experimental feature.
Since 2.18, the feature is not experimental anymore
The legacy backup controller is based on a simple cron job and didn’t support automated restore operations. The new experimental controllers utilize new CRDs for backups and restore, support multiple backup configurations per cluster, immediate backups and automated restore operations.
The new controllers try to be as backward compatible as possible with the legacy controller. However, it’s not possible to manage or restore legacy backups with the new controllers.
The new controllers manage backup, restore and cleanup operations using Kubernetes Jobs. All jobs triggered use containers that can be passed to the seed controller manager similar to the legacy backup controller.
Currently, only S3 compatible backup backends are supported.
Enabling The New controllers
To use the new backup/restore controller, the etcd-launcher feature must be enabled along with specifically enabling the controllers by passing the flag --enable-etcd-backups-restores
to the seed controller manager.
This can be achieved for a Seed by KPP admins through configuring backup destinations for a Seed. As soon as there is at least one backup destination set, the feature is enabled.
More info on that here Etcd Backup Destination Settings.
The legacy way of enabling the automatic etcd backups through the KubermaticConfiguration is still supported, although deprecated. It’s advised to migrate to the Seed backup destinations.
Backup and Delete Containers
The new Backup controller is designed to be a drop-in replacement for the legacy backup controller. To achieve this, the legacy backupStoreContainer
and backupCleanupContainer
are supported by the new controller. However, it’s best to use the new containers to enable the full functionality of the new controller.
backupStoreContainer
: it’s recommended to update the seed controller configuration to use the new backup container. The new container spec is provided in the charts
directory shipped with the KKP release:
charts/kubermatic/static/store-container-new.yaml
backupDeleteContainer
: backup deletions are performed using a customizable container that is passed to the seed controller via new optional argument backupDeleteContainer
. If this option is not set, the controller will not perform deletions and the legacy backupCleanupContainer
will be used instead. A container spec is provided in the charts
directory shipped with the KKP release:
charts/kubermatic/static/delete-container.yaml
You can’t have both backupCleanupContainer
and backupDeleteContainer
set. backupDeleteContainer
will take precedence when the new controller is enabled.
S3 Credentials and Settings
The new controllers will use the credentials setup in the Seed Backup destinations, depending on the destination used.
Legacy credentials from kube-system/backup-s3
and the bucket details in s3-settings
configmap is still supported, but deprecated. Please migrate to backup destinations.
Creating Backups
To create an automatic backup, simply create a backup configuration resource. Or use the UI as shown here Etcd Backup Management.
apiVersion: kubermatic.k8s.io/v1
kind: EtcdBackupConfig
metadata:
name: daily-backup
namespace: cluster-zvc78xnnz7
spec:
cluster:
apiVersion: kubermatic.k8s.io/v1
kind: Cluster
name: zvc78xnnz7
schedule: '0 1 * * *'
keep: 40
destination: s3
Once created, the controller will start a new backup every time the schedule demands it (i.e. at 1:00 AM in the example),
and delete backups once more than .spec.keep
(40 in the example) have been created. The created backups are named based on the
configuration name and the backup timestamp $backupconfigname-$timestamp
. The backup is stored at the specified backup destination,
which is configured per seed.
Backup creations and deletions are done by spawning Kubernetes jobs. For each backup, a job is created with an init container that creates a snapshot and a main container that will run the customizable store container. It will receive the cluster name and backup name in two environment variables. The store container should upload the snapshot to an S3 compatible backend and return exit code 0 if successful.
When a backup needs to be deleted, the controller starts another job with the delete container configured in the seed controller manager. The delete container receives the cluster and backup names in environment variables and must delete the backup at the place where it was uploaded by the create job earlier, and exit 0 if successful.
The controller maintains list of backups related to this configuration in the resource status spec, where it tracks the creation and deletion status of all backups that haven’t been successfully deleted yet.
One Time Backups - Snapshots
It’s also possible to trigger a one-time backup if needed. Simply by creating a backup configuration that doesn’t have a schedule
set in the spec. The backup controller will immediately create a backup job for the user cluster and will not attempt to run it again or delete it later.
Listing Backups
The Backup controller tracks all backups related to each configuration in a list in the backup configuration resource status spec. The status spec shows details about the backup status, cleanup status and the jobs triggered to run it and clean it up:
status:
lastBackups:
- backupFinishedTime: "2021-03-16T01:48:22Z"
backupName: zvc78xnnz7-jobtest1-2021-03-16T03:48:00
backupPhase: Completed
deleteFinishedTime: "2021-03-16T02:01:43Z"
deleteJobName: zvc78xnnz7-backup-jobtest1-delete-s8sb8mdsp5
deletePhase: Completed
jobName: zvc78xnnz7-backup-jobtest1-create-rjjq9d4k6d
scheduledTime: "2021-03-16T01:48:00Z"
- backupFinishedTime: "2021-03-16T01:51:25Z"
backupName: zvc78xnnz7-jobtest1-2021-03-16T03:51:00
backupPhase: Completed
deleteFinishedTime: "2021-03-16T02:04:08Z"
deleteJobName: zvc78xnnz7-backup-jobtest1-delete-wcwvc8nmdt
deletePhase: Completed
jobName: zvc78xnnz7-backup-jobtest1-create-96tblznngk
scheduledTime: "2021-03-16T01:51:00Z"
- backupFinishedTime: "2021-03-16T01:54:21Z"
backupName: zvc78xnnz7-jobtest1-2021-03-16T03:54:00
backupPhase: Completed
deleteFinishedTime: "2021-03-16T02:08:24Z"
deleteJobName: zvc78xnnz7-backup-jobtest1-delete-cgmqhlw5fw
deletePhase: Completed
jobName: zvc78xnnz7-backup-jobtest1-create-v2gz2ntn46
scheduledTime: "2021-03-16T01:54:00Z"
Restoring Backups
To restore a cluster from am existing backup, you simply create a restore resource in the cluster namespace:
apiVersion: kubermatic.k8s.io/v1
kind: EtcdRestore
metadata:
name: cluster-restore
namespace: cluster-zvc78xnnz7
spec:
cluster:
apiVersion: kubermatic.k8s.io/v1
kind: Cluster
name: zvc78xnnz7
backupName: daily-backup-2021-03-02T15:24:00
destination: s3
Once this resource is created, the controller will reconcile it and apply the following restore procedure:
- Pause the cluster.
- Delete the etcd Statefulset and Volumes.
- Set the
EtcdClusterInitialized
cluster condition to false. - Unpause the cluster and wait until the cluster controller has recreated the etcd Statefulset.
- During the etcd Statefulset recreation, the etcd-launcher will detect the active restore resources and will download the backup from the S3 backend based on the credentials from the
kube-system/backup-s3
secret and the information from the kube-system/s3-settings
configmap. - Once the backup is downloaded successfully, the etcd-launcher will restore the backup and restart the etcd ring.
- Once the etcd cluster is recovered and quorum is achieved, the
EtcdClusterInitialized
cluster condition to true.
Currently, The restore controller only support S3 compatible backends for downloading backups.