Set global database configurations
The Redis Enterprise Active-Active database (REAADB) custom resource contains the field .spec.globalConfigurations
. This field sets configurations for the Active-Active database across all participating clusters, such as memory size, shard count, and the global database secrets.
The REAADB API reference contains a full list of available fields.
Edit global configurations
Edit or patch the REAADB custom resource with your global configuration changes.
The example command below patches the REAADB named
reaadb-boeing
to set the global memory size to 200MB:kubectl patch reaadb reaadb-boeing --type merge --patch \ '{"spec": {"globalConfigurations": {"memorySize": "200mb"}}}'
Verify the status is
active
and the spec status isValid
.This example shows the status for the
reaadb-boeing
database.kubectl get reaadb reaadb-boeing NAME STATUS SPEC STATUS GLOBAL CONFIGURATIONS REDB LINKED REDBS reaadb-boeing active Valid
View the global configurations on each participating cluster to verify they are synced.
kubectl get reaadb <reaadb-name> -o yaml
Edit global configuration secrets
This section edits the secrets under the REAADB ‘.spec.globalConfigurations’ section. For more information and all available fields, see the REAADB API reference.
On an existing participating cluster, generate a YAML file containing the database secret with the relevant data.
This example shoes a secret named
my-db-secret
with the passwordmy-password
encoded in base 64.apiVersion: v1 data: password: bXktcGFzcw kind: Secret metadata: name: my-db-secret type: Opaque
Apply the secret file from the previous step, substituting your own value for
<db-secret-file>
.kubectl apply -f <db-secret-file>
Patch the REAADB custom resource to specify the database secret, substituting your own values for
<reaadb-name>
and<secret-name>
.kubectl patch reaadb <reaadb-name> --type merge --patch \ '{"spec": {"globalConfigurations": {"databaseSecretName": "secret-name"}}}'
Check the REAADB status for an
active
status andValid
spec status.kubectl get reaadb <reaadb-name> NAME STATUS SPEC STATUS GLOBAL CONFIGURATIONS REDB LINKED REDBS reaadb-boeing active Valid
On each other participating cluster, check the secret status.
``sh kubectl get reaadb
-o=jsonpath=’{.status.secretsStatus}’ The output should show the status as `Invalid`. ```sh [{"name":"my-db-secret","status":"Invalid"}]
Sync the secret on each participating cluster.
kubectl apply -f <db-secret-file>
Repeat the previous two steps on every participating cluster.