Deploy a Redis cluster on GKE


This tutorial provides recommended practices for creating a stateful application and upgrading the Google Kubernetes Engine (GKE) cluster that's running the application. This tutorial uses Redis as an example for deploying a stateful application, but the same concepts are applicable to other types of stateful applications deployed on GKE.

Objectives

This tutorial covers the following steps:

  1. Create a GKE cluster enrolled in a release channel.
  2. Create a Redis Cluster on GKE.
  3. Deploy the Redis client application to GKE.
  4. Perform these best practices for node pool upgrades:
    1. Set up the Pod Disruption Budget (PDB).
    2. Set up the maintenance window and exclusions.
    3. Set up the node upgrade strategy to either surge upgrade or blue-green upgrade.
  5. Test the application.
  6. Upgrade the cluster.
  7. Test workload disruption.

The following diagram shows you a high-level view of the cluster architecture for this tutorial:

Architecture diagram

Costs

In this document, you use the following billable components of Google Cloud:

To generate a cost estimate based on your projected usage, use the pricing calculator. New Google Cloud users might be eligible for a free trial.

When you finish the tasks that are described in this document, you can avoid continued billing by deleting the resources that you created. For more information, see Clean up.

Before you begin

Set up your project

  1. Sign in to your Google Cloud account. If you're new to Google Cloud, create an account to evaluate how our products perform in real-world scenarios. New customers also get $300 in free credits to run, test, and deploy workloads.
  2. In the Google Cloud console, on the project selector page, click Create project to begin creating a new Google Cloud project.

    Go to project selector

  3. Make sure that billing is enabled for your Google Cloud project.

  4. Enable the GKE API.

    Enable the API

  5. In the Google Cloud console, on the project selector page, click Create project to begin creating a new Google Cloud project.

    Go to project selector

  6. Make sure that billing is enabled for your Google Cloud project.

  7. Enable the GKE API.

    Enable the API

Set defaults for the Google Cloud CLI

  1. In the Google Cloud console, start a Cloud Shell instance:
    Open Cloud Shell

  2. Download the source code for this sample app:

     git clone https://github.com/GoogleCloudPlatform/kubernetes-engine-samples
     cd kubernetes-engine-samples/quickstarts/hello-app-redis/manifests
    
  3. Set the default environment variables:

     gcloud config set project PROJECT-ID
     gcloud config set compute/zone COMPUTE-ZONE
    

    Replace the following values:

Create a GKE cluster enrolled in a release channel

To create your GKE cluster, complete the following steps:

  1. Create a cluster named redis-test with three nodes:

    gcloud container clusters create redis-test \
        --num-nodes=3 \
        --release-channel regular
    

    Once the cluster is created, you should see output similar to the following example:

      NAME: redis-test
      LOCATION: us-central1-c
      MASTER_VERSION: 1.22.10-gke.600
      MASTER_IP: 34.69.67.7
      MACHINE_TYPE: e2-medium
      NODE_VERSION: 1.22.10-gke.600
      NUM_NODES: 3
      STATUS: RUNNING
    
  2. Configure kubectl to communicate with the cluster:

    gcloud container clusters get-credentials redis-test
    

Create a Redis Cluster on GKE

In this section, you add a Redis Cluster on top of the GKE cluster you previously created by deploying a ConfigMap, StatefulSet, and headless Service.

To create a Redis cluster, complete these steps:

  1. Refer to the ConfigMap file (redis-configmap.yaml) which stores the Redis configuration. The snippet below shows the Readiness probe and the Liveness probe scripts.

    readiness.sh: |-
      #!/bin/sh
    
      pingResponse="$(redis-cli -h localhost ping)"
      if [ "$?" -eq "124" ]; then
        echo "PING timed out"
        exit 1
      fi
    
      if [ "$pingResponse" != "PONG"]; then
        echo "$pingResponse"
        exit 1
      fi
    liveness.sh: |-
      #!/bin/sh
    
      pingResponse="$(redis-cli -h localhost ping | head -n1 | awk '{print $1;}')"
      if [ "$?" -eq "124" ]; then
        echo "PING timed out"
        exit 1
      fi
    
      if [ "$pingResponse" != "PONG"] && [ "$pingResponse" != "LOADING" ] && [ "$pingResponse" != "MASTERDOWN" ]; then
        echo "$pingResponse"
        exit 1
      fi

    The readiness.sh and liveness.sh scripts use redis-cli ping to check if the redis server is running or not. If it returns PONG, the Redis server is up and running. These scripts will be used in the redis-cluster.yaml.

    To learn more about the Redis parameters in this ConfigMap, see the Redis Cluster configuration parameters section in the Redis Cluster tutorial.

  2. Deploy the ConfigMap:

    kubectl apply -f redis-configmap.yaml
    
  3. Refer to the StatefulSet (redis-cluster.yaml) snippet below which shows the usage of the Readiness probe and the Liveness probe.

    To learn about how to configure probes in Kubernetes, see Configure Probes.

    startupProbe:
      periodSeconds: 5
      timeoutSeconds: 5
      successThreshold: 1
      failureThreshold: 20
      tcpSocket:
        port: redis
    livenessProbe:
      periodSeconds: 5
      timeoutSeconds: 5
      successThreshold: 1
      failureThreshold: 5
      exec:
        command: ["sh", "-c", "/probes/liveness.sh"]
    readinessProbe:
      periodSeconds: 5
      timeoutSeconds: 1
      successThreshold: 1
      failureThreshold: 5
      exec:
        command: ["sh", "-c", "/probes/readiness.sh"]

    We strongly recommend that you use Readiness and Liveness probes when upgrading node pools; this ensures that your Pods are ready during an upgrade.

  4. Deploy the StatefulSet:

    kubectl apply -f redis-cluster.yaml
    
  5. The headless Service named redis-service.yaml is for the Redis nodes' connection. The clusterIP field is set to None in order to create a headless Service.

    Deploy the Service:

    kubectl apply -f redis-service.yaml
    
  6. Wait approximately two minutes and verify all the Pods are running by using the following command:

    kubectl get pods
    

    You should see output similar to the following example:

    NAME      READY   STATUS              RESTARTS   AGE
    redis-0   1/1     Running             0          2m29s
    redis-1   1/1     Running             0          2m8s
    redis-2   1/1     Running             0          107s
    redis-3   1/1     Running             0          85s
    redis-4   1/1     Running             0          54s
    redis-5   1/1     Running             0          23s
    
  7. Verify the persistent volumes were created by running the following command:

    kubectl get pv
    

    You should see output similar to the following example:

    NAME       CAPACITY   ACCESS MODES   RECLAIM POLICY   STATUS   CLAIM                  STORAGECLASS   REASON   AGE
    pvc-HASH   1Gi        RWO            Delete           Bound    default/data-redis-5   standard                75s
    pvc-HASH   1Gi        RWO            Delete           Bound    default/data-redis-1   standard                2m59s
    pvc-HASH   1Gi        RWO            Delete           Bound    default/data-redis-3   standard                2m16s
    pvc-HASH   1Gi        RWO            Delete           Bound    default/data-redis-2   standard                2m38s
    pvc-HASH   1Gi        RWO            Delete           Bound    default/data-redis-0   standard                3m20s
    pvc-HASH   1Gi        RWO            Delete           Bound    default/data-redis-4   standard                104s
    

    In this output, HASH represents a hash which is attached to each persistent volume name.

Assign roles to your Redis Cluster

Once the configuration is complete, assign roles to the Redis Cluster.

The following script obtains the Pod IP addresses, then assigns the leader and follower roles by passing each of the Pod IP addresses into the command:

#!/bin/bash
# Usage: ./roles.sh

urls=$(kubectl get pods -l app=redis -o jsonpath='{range.items[*]}{.status.podIP} ')
command="kubectl exec -it redis-0 -- redis-cli --cluster create --cluster-replicas 1 "

for url in $urls
do
    command+=$url":6379 "
done

echo "Executing command: " $command
$command

To assign roles to your Redis cluster, complete these steps:

  1. Run the script:

    chmod +x ./roles.sh
    ./roles.sh
    
  2. Type yes when prompted.

  3. Log in to a Redis node to check its role. For example, to verify that that redis-0 has a leader role, run the following command:

    kubectl exec -it redis-0 -- redis-cli role
    

    You should see output similar to the following example:

    1) "master"
    2) (integer) 574
    3) 1) 1) "10.28.2.3"
           2) "6379"
           3) "574"
    

Deploy the Redis client application

To deploy your application to the GKE cluster you created, define a Deployment for your application. The file named app-deployment.yaml contains the deployment definition for the application.

To learn more about the probes and Pod affinity rules used in this Deployment, see GKE best practices: Designing and building highly available clusters.

To create the Deployment, complete the following steps:

  1. Apply the Deployment:

    kubectl apply -f app-deployment.yaml
    
  2. Expose the application through a load balancer:

    kubectl expose deployment hello-web \
        --type=LoadBalancer \
        --port 80 \
        --target-port 8080
    
  3. Wait approximately one minute and retrieve the application's external IP address by running the following command:

    kubectl get service
    

    From the output, copy the value listed in hello-web's EXTERNAL-IP column:

    NAME             TYPE           CLUSTER-IP    EXTERNAL-IP    PORT(S)              AGE
    hello-web        LoadBalancer   10.13.10.55   EXTERNAL_IP   80:30703/TCP         166m
    
  4. Verify the application is working by pasting the EXTERNAL_IP into your web browser. You should see output similar to the following example:

    I have been hit [1] times since deployment!
    

    Take note of the visit number. You need to use it in the Testing the application's disruption section.

  5. Set a variable for the EXTERNAL_IP you just copied. You use this value when you create scripts to test your application in the next section:

    export IP=EXTERNAL_IP
    

Configure best practices for node pool upgrades

Perform these best practices for stateful applications to optimize for better availability during node pool upgrades.

Set up the Pod Disruption Budget (PDB)

Create a Pod Disruption Budget to limit the number of replicated Pods that are down simultaneously during a voluntary disruption. This is useful for stateful application where there needs to be a quorum for the number of replicas to be available during an upgrade.

apiVersion: policy/v1
kind: PodDisruptionBudget
metadata:
  name: redis-pdb
spec:
  minAvailable: 3
  selector:
    matchLabels:
      app: redis

In a PDB definition:

  • app specifies which application this PDB applies to.
  • minAvailable sets the minimum number of Pods to be available during a disruption. It can be a value or a percentage (e.g. 30%).
  • maxUnavailable sets the maximum number of Pods that can be unavailable during a disruption. It can be a value or a percentage as well.

To set up the PDB, complete these steps:

  1. Deploy the PDB:

    kubectl apply -f pdb-minavailable.yaml
    
  2. Verify that the PDB has been created:

    kubectl get pdb
    

Set up the maintenance windows and exclusions

Node auto-upgrades streamline the upgrade process and keep the nodes in the cluster up-to-date when the control plane is upgraded on your behalf. This feature is enabled by default. To learn more, see Auto-upgrading nodes.

Use maintenance windows and maintenance exclusions to set up time frames and control when maintenance can and cannot occur on GKE clusters:

  1. Set up a maintenance window that starts at 2:00 AM UTC on August 19, 2022, and finishes four hours later. This maintenance window runs daily. During this time, automatic maintenance is permitted.

    gcloud container clusters update redis-test \
       --maintenance-window-start 2022-08-19T02:00:00Z \
       --maintenance-window-end 2022-08-19T06:00:00Z \
       --maintenance-window-recurrence FREQ=DAILY
    
  2. Set up an exclusion window that prevents maintenance during the New Year holiday. This maintenance exclusion uses the no_upgrades scope. During this time, no automatic maintenance of any kind is permitted. To learn more, see Scope of maintenance to exclude.

    gcloud container clusters update redis-test \
       --add-maintenance-exclusion-name new-year \
       --add-maintenance-exclusion-start 2022-12-26T00:00:00Z \
       --add-maintenance-exclusion-end 2023-01-02T02:00:00Z \
       --add-maintenance-exclusion-scope no_upgrades
    
  3. Verify the maintenance window and exclusions are applied. Look under maintenancePolicy:

    gcloud container clusters describe redis-test
    

To learn more, see Configure maintenance windows and exclusions.

Configure a node upgrade strategy

There are two node upgrade strategies you can use for the node pools in your GKE cluster: Blue-green upgrades and surge upgrades. To learn more, see Node upgrade strategies.

Blue-green upgrades

Choose blue-green upgrades if the workloads are less tolerant of disruptions, and a temporary cost increase due to higher resource usage is acceptable.

Run the following command to change the current node pools to blue-green upgrade strategy.

gcloud container node-pools update default-pool \
--cluster=redis-test \
--enable-blue-green-upgrade \
--zone COMPUTE-ZONE \
--node-pool-soak-duration=120s

Node pool soak duration is set to two minutes to save time during the soak node pool phase for the purpose of this tutorial. This phase is used to verify the workload's health after the blue pool nodes have been drained. We recommend setting the node pool soak duration to one hour (3600 seconds) or a duration that best suits the application.

For more information about managing pod allocation, see Deploy a Pod to a specific node pool and Deploying Services to specific node pools.

For more information about configuring blue-green upgrades, see Configure blue-green upgrades.

Surge upgrades

Choose surge upgrades if cost optimization is important and if workloads can tolerate a graceful shutdown in less than 60 minutes (GKE respects PDB up to 60 minutes).

Run the following command to change the current node pools to surge upgrade strategy.

gcloud container node-pools update default-pool \
--max-surge-upgrade=1 \
--max-unavailable-upgrade=0 \
--cluster=redis-test

With this configuration (maxSurge=1 and maxUnavailable=0), only one surge node can be added to the node pool during an upgrade, so only one node can be upgraded at a time. This setting speeds up Pod restarts during upgrades while progressing conservatively.

For more information about configuring surge upgrades, see Configure surge upgrades.

Check the current node pool configuration:

   gcloud container node-pools describe default-pool \
   --cluster redis-test \
   --zone COMPUTE-ZONE

For more information on viewing node pools, see View node pools in a cluster.

Test the application

In this section you use two scripts, one that sends requests to your application, and one that measures the success rate of the requests. You use these scripts to measure what happens when you upgrade your cluster.

To create the scripts:

  1. Change to the directory containing the scripts:

    cd
    cd kubernetes-engine-samples/quickstarts/hello-app-redis/scripts
    
  2. Refer to the script named generate_load.sh which sends a queries-per-second (QPS) request to your application. The script saves the HTTP response code into the current directory to a file named output. The value of output is used in the script you create in the next step.

    #!/bin/bash
    # Usage: ./generate_load.sh <IP> <QPS>
    
    IP=$1
    QPS=$2
    
    while true
      do for N in $(seq 1 $QPS)
        do curl -I -m 5 -s -w "%{http_code}\n" -o /dev/null http://${IP}/ >> output &
        done
      sleep 1
    done
  3. Refer to the script named print_error_rate.sh which calculates the success rate based on the output generated by generate_load.sh.

    #!/bin/bash
    # Usage: watch ./print_error_rate.sh
    
    TOTAL=$(cat output | wc -l);
    SUCCESS=$(grep "200" output |  wc -l);
    ERROR1=$(grep "000" output |  wc -l)
    ERROR2=$(grep "503" output |  wc -l)
    ERROR3=$(grep "500" output |  wc -l)
    SUCCESS_RATE=$(($SUCCESS * 100 / TOTAL))
    ERROR_RATE=$(($ERROR1 * 100 / TOTAL))
    ERROR_RATE_2=$(($ERROR2 * 100 / TOTAL))
    ERROR_RATE_3=$(($ERROR3 * 100 / TOTAL))
    echo "Success rate: $SUCCESS/$TOTAL (${SUCCESS_RATE}%)"
    echo "App network Error rate: $ERROR1/$TOTAL (${ERROR_RATE}%)"
    echo "Resource Error rate: $ERROR2/$TOTAL (${ERROR_RATE_2}%)"
    echo "Redis Error rate: $ERROR3/$TOTAL (${ERROR_RATE_3}%)"
  4. Give yourself permission to run the scripts:

    chmod u+x generate_load.sh print_error_rate.sh
    
  5. Set a variable for the number of QPS. This value is used in the generate_load.sh script as is the variable you set for the EXTERNAL_IP. We recommend you set a value of 40.

    export QPS=40
    
  6. Run the generate_load.sh script to start sending QPS:

    ./generate_load.sh $IP $QPS 2>&1
    
  7. Leave the generate_load.sh script running and open a new terminal. In the new terminal, run the print_error_rate.sh script to check the error rate:

    cd
    cd kubernetes-engine-samples/quickstarts/hello-app-redis/scripts
    watch ./print_error_rate.sh
    

    You should see a 100% success rate and 0% error rates as the QPS are made.

  8. Leave both scripts running and open a third terminal in preparation for the next section.

Upgrade the cluster

To upgrade the cluster, complete these steps:

  1. Determine which GKE version the redis-test cluster is using:

    V=$(gcloud container clusters describe redis-test | grep "version:" | sed "s/version: //")
    echo $V
    

    You should see output similar to the following example: 1.22.9-gke.2000.

  2. Retrieve a list of available Kubernetes versions:

    gcloud container get-server-config
    
  3. In the list of versions, locate the validMasterVersions: section and look for the redis-test version you retrieved in the previous step. To avoid violating the GKE version skew policy by picking a version incompatible with the nodes, copy the version from the list that is listed immediately before the redis-test version.

  4. Upgrade the cluster's control plane to the version you selected and type y when prompted:

    gcloud container clusters upgrade redis-test \
        --master \
        --cluster-version VERSION
    

    Replace VERSION with the version you selected from the list in the previous step.

    The control plane upgrade takes several minutes.

  5. Upgrade the cluster's nodes to the version you selected and type y when prompted:

    gcloud container clusters upgrade redis-test \
        --cluster-version=VERSION \
        --node-pool=default-pool
    

    Replace VERSION with the version you selected from the list.

Test workload disruption

In this section, you test your application's status and observe workload disruption.

  1. Return to the terminal window running ./print_error_rate.sh and observe how the success rate changed during the upgrade. You should notice a slight decrease in the success rate and a slight increase in the app network error rate as the nodes are taken down to be upgraded.

    In the Success rate field, you'll see how many visits were successfully made to the website. Take a note of this value.

  2. Stop both scripts from running by entering CTRL+C in the relevant terminals.

  3. Return to the website for your application by entering its IP address (this is the EXTERNAL_IP you copied during the Deploy the Redis client application section) into your browser.

  4. Observe the visit number for your application. The number you see should equal:

    ORIGINAL_VISIT_NUMBER + SUCCESSFUL_VISIT_NUMBER

    where ORIGINAL_VISIT_NUMBER is the number you recorded in the final step of Deploy the Redis client application and SUCCESSFUL_VISIT_NUMBER is the value you recorded in the first step of this section.

Clean up

After you finish the tutorial, you can clean up the resources that you created so that they stop using quota and incurring charges. The following sections describe how to delete or turn off these resources.

Delete the project

The easiest way to eliminate billing is to delete the project that you created for the tutorial.

To delete the project:

  1. In the Google Cloud console, go to the Manage resources page.

    Go to Manage resources

  2. In the project list, select the project that you want to delete, and then click Delete.
  3. In the dialog, type the project ID, and then click Shut down to delete the project.

Delete the cluster

To delete the cluster you created for this tutorial, run the following command:

gcloud container clusters delete redis-test

What's next