288 lines
9.6 KiB
Markdown
288 lines
9.6 KiB
Markdown
# Crossplane configuration
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Once Crossplane [is installed](applications.md#crossplane), it must be configured for
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use.
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The process of configuring Crossplane includes:
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1. Configuring RBAC permissions.
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1. Configuring Crossplane with a cloud provider.
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1. Configure managed service access.
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1. Setting up Resource classes.
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1. Using Auto DevOps configuration options.
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1. Connect to the PostgreSQL instance.
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To allow Crossplane to provision cloud services such as PostgreSQL, the cloud provider
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stack must be configured with a user account. For example:
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- A service account for GCP.
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- An IAM user for AWS.
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Important notes:
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- This guide uses GCP as an example. However, the process for AWS and Azure will be
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similar.
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- Crossplane requires the Kubernetes cluster to be VPC native with Alias IPs enabled so
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that the IP address of the pods are routable within the GCP network.
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First, we need to declare some environment variables with configuration that will be used throughout this guide:
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```shell
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export PROJECT_ID=crossplane-playground # the GCP project where all resources reside.
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export NETWORK_NAME=default # the GCP network where your GKE is provisioned.
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export REGION=us-central1 # the GCP region where the GKE cluster is provisioned.
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```
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## Configure RBAC permissions
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- For GitLab-managed clusters, RBAC is configured automatically.
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- For non-GitLab managed clusters, ensure that the service account for the token provided can manage resources in the `database.crossplane.io` API group:
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1. Save the following YAML as `crossplane-database-role.yaml`:
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```yaml
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apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
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kind: ClusterRole
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metadata:
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name: crossplane-database-role
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labels:
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rbac.authorization.k8s.io/aggregate-to-edit: "true"
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rules:
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- apiGroups:
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- database.crossplane.io
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resources:
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- postgresqlinstances
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verbs:
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- get
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- list
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- create
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- update
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- delete
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- patch
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- watch
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```
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1. Apply the cluster role to the cluster:
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```shell
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kubectl apply -f crossplane-database-role.yaml
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```
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## Configure Crossplane with a cloud provider
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See [Configure Your Cloud Provider Account](https://crossplane.io/docs/v0.4/cloud-providers.html)
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to configure the installed cloud provider stack with a user account.
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Note that the Secret and the Provider resource referencing the Secret needs to be
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applied to the `gitlab-managed-apps` namespace in the guide. Make sure you change that
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while following the process.
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[Configure Providers](https://crossplane.io/docs/v0.4/cloud-providers.html)
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## Configure Managed Service Access
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We need to configure connectivity between the PostgreSQL database and the GKE cluster.
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This can done by either:
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- Using Crossplane as demonstrated below.
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- Directly in the GCP console by
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[configuring private services access](https://cloud.google.com/vpc/docs/configure-private-services-access).
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Create a GlobalAddress and Connection resources:
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```shell
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cat > network.yaml <<EOF
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---
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# gitlab-ad-globaladdress defines the IP range that will be allocated for cloud services connecting to the instances in the given Network.
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apiVersion: compute.gcp.crossplane.io/v1alpha3
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kind: GlobalAddress
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metadata:
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name: gitlab-ad-globaladdress
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spec:
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providerRef:
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name: gcp-provider
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reclaimPolicy: Delete
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name: gitlab-ad-globaladdress
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purpose: VPC_PEERING
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addressType: INTERNAL
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prefixLength: 16
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network: projects/$PROJECT_ID/global/networks/$NETWORK_NAME
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---
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# gitlab-ad-connection is what allows cloud services to use the allocated GlobalAddress for communication. Behind
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# the scenes, it creates a VPC peering to the network that those service instances actually live.
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apiVersion: servicenetworking.gcp.crossplane.io/v1alpha3
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kind: Connection
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metadata:
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name: gitlab-ad-connection
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spec:
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providerRef:
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name: gcp-provider
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reclaimPolicy: Delete
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parent: services/servicenetworking.googleapis.com
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network: projects/$PROJECT_ID/global/networks/$NETWORK_NAME
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reservedPeeringRangeRefs:
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- name: gitlab-ad-globaladdress
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EOF
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```
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Apply the settings specified in the file with the following command:
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```shell
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kubectl apply -f network.yaml
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```
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You can verify creation of the network resources with the following commands.
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Verify that the status of both of these resources is ready and is synced.
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```shell
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kubectl describe connection.servicenetworking.gcp.crossplane.io gitlab-ad-connection
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kubectl describe globaladdress.compute.gcp.crossplane.io gitlab-ad-globaladdress
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```
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## Setting up Resource classes
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Resource classes are a way of defining a configuration for the required managed service. We will define the PostgreSQL Resource class
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- Define a `gcp-postgres-standard.yaml` resourceclass which contains
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1. A default CloudSQLInstanceClass.
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1. A CloudSQLInstanceClass with labels.
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```shell
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cat > gcp-postgres-standard.yaml <<EOF
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apiVersion: database.gcp.crossplane.io/v1beta1
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kind: CloudSQLInstanceClass
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metadata:
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name: cloudsqlinstancepostgresql-standard
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labels:
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gitlab-ad-demo: "true"
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specTemplate:
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writeConnectionSecretsToNamespace: gitlab-managed-apps
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forProvider:
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databaseVersion: POSTGRES_9_6
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region: $REGION
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settings:
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tier: db-custom-1-3840
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dataDiskType: PD_SSD
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dataDiskSizeGb: 10
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ipConfiguration:
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privateNetwork: projects/$PROJECT_ID/global/networks/$NETWORK_NAME
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# this should match the name of the provider created in the above step
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providerRef:
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name: gcp-provider
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reclaimPolicy: Delete
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---
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apiVersion: database.gcp.crossplane.io/v1beta1
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kind: CloudSQLInstanceClass
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metadata:
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name: cloudsqlinstancepostgresql-standard-default
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annotations:
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resourceclass.crossplane.io/is-default-class: "true"
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specTemplate:
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writeConnectionSecretsToNamespace: gitlab-managed-apps
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forProvider:
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databaseVersion: POSTGRES_9_6
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region: $REGION
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settings:
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tier: db-custom-1-3840
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dataDiskType: PD_SSD
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dataDiskSizeGb: 10
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ipConfiguration:
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privateNetwork: projects/$PROJECT_ID/global/networks/$NETWORK_NAME
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# this should match the name of the provider created in the above step
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providerRef:
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name: gcp-provider
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reclaimPolicy: Delete
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EOF
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```
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Apply the resource class configuration with the following command:
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```shell
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kubectl apply -f gcp-postgres-standard.yaml
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```
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Verify creation of the Resource class with the following command:
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```shell
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kubectl get cloudsqlinstanceclasses
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```
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The Resource Classes allow you to define classes of service for a managed service. We could create another `CloudSQLInstanceClass` which requests for a larger or a faster disk. It could also request for a specific version of the database.
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## Auto DevOps Configuration Options
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The Auto DevOps pipeline can be run with the following options:
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The Environment variables, `AUTO_DEVOPS_POSTGRES_MANAGED` and `AUTO_DEVOPS_POSTGRES_MANAGED_CLASS_SELECTOR` need to be set to provision PostgreSQL using Crossplane
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Alternatively, the following options can be overridden from the values for the Helm chart.
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- `postgres.managed` set to true which will select a default resource class.
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The resource class needs to be marked with the annotation
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`resourceclass.crossplane.io/is-default-class: "true"`. The CloudSQLInstanceClass
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`cloudsqlinstancepostgresql-standard-default` will be used to satisfy the claim.
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- `postgres.managed` set to `true` with `postgres.managedClassSelector`
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providing the resource class to choose based on labels. In this case, the
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value of `postgres.managedClassSelector.matchLabels.gitlab-ad-demo="true"`
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will select the CloudSQLInstance class `cloudsqlinstancepostgresql-standard`
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to satisfy the claim request.
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The Auto DevOps pipeline should provision a PostgresqlInstance when it runs successfully.
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Verify creation of the PostgreSQL Instance.
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```shell
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kubectl get postgresqlinstance
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```
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Sample Output: The `STATUS` field of the PostgresqlInstance transitions to `BOUND` when it is successfully provisioned.
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```plaintext
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NAME STATUS CLASS-KIND CLASS-NAME RESOURCE-KIND RESOURCE-NAME AGE
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staging-test8 Bound CloudSQLInstanceClass cloudsqlinstancepostgresql-standard CloudSQLInstance xp-ad-demo-24-staging-staging-test8-jj55c 9m
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```
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The endpoint of the PostgreSQL instance, and the user credentials, are present in a secret called `app-postgres` within the same project namespace.
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Verify the secret with the database information is created with the following command:
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```shell
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kubectl describe secret app-postgres
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```
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Sample Output:
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```plaintext
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Name: app-postgres
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Namespace: xp-ad-demo-24-staging
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Labels: <none>
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Annotations: crossplane.io/propagate-from-name: 108e460e-06c7-11ea-b907-42010a8000bd
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crossplane.io/propagate-from-namespace: gitlab-managed-apps
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crossplane.io/propagate-from-uid: 10c79605-06c7-11ea-b907-42010a8000bd
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Type: Opaque
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Data
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====
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privateIP: 8 bytes
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publicIP: 13 bytes
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serverCACertificateCert: 1272 bytes
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serverCACertificateCertSerialNumber: 1 bytes
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serverCACertificateCreateTime: 24 bytes
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serverCACertificateExpirationTime: 24 bytes
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username: 8 bytes
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endpoint: 8 bytes
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password: 27 bytes
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serverCACertificateCommonName: 98 bytes
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serverCACertificateInstance: 41 bytes
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serverCACertificateSha1Fingerprint: 40 bytes
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```
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## Connect to the PostgreSQL instance
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Follow this [GCP guide](https://cloud.google.com/sql/docs/postgres/connect-kubernetes-engine) if you
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would like to connect to the newly provisioned PostgreSQL database instance on CloudSQL.
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