Database Role Management v1
From its inception, EDB Postgres for Kubernetes has managed the creation of specific roles required in PostgreSQL instances:
- some reserved users, such as the
postgres
superuser,streaming_replica
andcnp_pooler_pgbouncer
(when the PgBouncerPooler
is used) - The application user, set as the low-privilege owner of the application database
This process is described in the "Bootstrap" section.
With the managed
stanza in the cluster spec, EDB Postgres for Kubernetes now provides full
lifecycle management for roles specified in .spec.managed.roles
.
This feature enables declarative management of existing roles, as well as the creation of new roles if they are not already present in the database. Role creation will occur after the database bootstrapping is complete.
An example manifest for a cluster with declarative role management can be found
in the file cluster-example-with-roles.yaml
.
Here is an excerpt from that file:
The role specification in .spec.managed.roles
adheres to the
PostgreSQL structure and naming conventions.
Please refer to the API reference for
the full list of attributes you can define for each role.
A few points are worth noting:
- The
ensure
attribute is not part of PostgreSQL. It enables declarative role management to create and remove roles. The two possible values arepresent
(the default) andabsent
. - The
inherit
attribute is true by default, following PostgreSQL conventions. - The
connectionLimit
attribute defaults to -1, in line with PostgreSQL conventions. - Role membership with
inRoles
defaults to no memberships.
Declarative role management ensures that PostgreSQL instances align with the spec. If a user modifies role attributes directly in the database, the EDB Postgres for Kubernetes operator will revert those changes during the next reconciliation cycle.
Password management
The declarative role management feature includes reconciling of role passwords. Passwords are managed in fundamentally different ways in the Kubernetes world and in PostgreSQL, and as a result there are a few things to note.
Managed role configurations may optionally specify the name of a Secret where the username and password are stored (encoded in Base64 as is usual in Kubernetes). For example:
This would assume the existence of a Secret called cluster-example-dante
,
containing a username and password. The username should match the role we
are setting the password for. For example, :
If there is no passwordSecret
specified for a role, the instance manager will
not try to CREATE / ALTER the role with a password. This keeps with PostgreSQL
conventions, where ALTER will not update passwords unless directed to with
WITH PASSWORD
.
If a role was initially created with a password, and we would like to set the
password to NULL in PostgreSQL, this necessitates being explicit on the part of
the user of EDB Postgres for Kubernetes.
To distinguish "no password provided in spec" from "set the password to NULL",
the field DisablePassword
should be used.
Imagine we decided we would like to have no password on the dante
role in the
database. In such case we would specify the following:
NOTE: it is considered an error to set both passwordSecret
and
disablePassword
on a given role.
This configuration will be rejected by the validation webhook.
Password expiry, VALID UNTIL
The VALID UNTIL
role attribute in PostgreSQL controls password expiry. Roles
created without VALID UNTIL
specified get NULL by default in PostgreSQL,
meaning that their password will never expire.
PostgreSQL uses a timestamp type for VALID UNTIL
, which includes support for
the value 'infinity'
indicating that the password never expires. Please see the
PostgreSQL documentation
for reference.
With declarative role management, the validUntil
attribute for managed roles
controls password expiry. validUntil
can only take:
- a Kubernetes timestamp, or
- be omitted (defaulting to
null
)
In the first case, the given validUntil
timestamp will be set in the database
as the VALID UNTIL
attribute of the role.
In the second case (omitted validUntil
) the operator will ensure password
never expires, mirroring the behavior of PostgreSQL. Specifically:
- in case of new role, it will omit the
VALID UNTIL
clause in the role creation statement - in case of existing role, it will set
VALID UNTIL
toinfinity
ifVALID UNTIL
was not set toNULL
in the database (this is due to PostgreSQL not allowingVALID UNTIL NULL
in theALTER ROLE
SQL statement)
Warning
New roles created without passwordSecret
will have a NULL
password
inside PostgreSQL.
Password hashed
You can also provide pre-encrypted passwords by specifying the password in MD5/SCRAM-SHA-256 hash format:
Unrealizable role configurations
In PostgreSQL, in some cases, commands cannot be honored by the database and will be rejected. Please refer to the PostgreSQL documentation on error codes for details.
Role operations can produce such fundamental errors. Two examples:
- We ask PostgreSQL to create the role
petrarca
as a member of the role (group)poets
, butpoets
does not exist. - We ask PostgreSQL to drop the role
dante
, but the roledante
is the owner of the databaseinferno
.
These fundamental errors cannot be fixed by the database, nor the EDB Postgres for Kubernetes
operator, without clarification from the human administrator. The two examples
above could be fixed by creating the role poets
or dropping the database
inferno
respectively, but they might have originated due to human error, and
in such case, the "fix" proposed might be the wrong thing to do.
EDB Postgres for Kubernetes will record when such fundamental errors occur, and will display them in the cluster Status. Which segues into…
Status of managed roles
The Cluster status includes a section for the managed roles' status, as shown below:
Note the special sub-section cannotReconcile
for operations the database (and
EDB Postgres for Kubernetes) cannot honor, and which require human intervention.
This section covers roles reserved for operator use and those that are not under declarative management, providing a comprehensive view of the roles in the database instances.
The kubectl plugin also shows the status of managed roles
in its status
sub-command:
Important
In terms of backward compatibility, declarative role management is designed to ignore roles that exist in the database but are not included in the spec. The lifecycle of these roles will continue to be managed within PostgreSQL, allowing EDB Postgres for Kubernetes users to adopt this feature at their convenience.