This section describes the standard upgrade procedure for upgrading Usage EngineĀ on Amazon Web Services. This procedure should be used to ensure that configurations, persisted data (in the file system or database), and system properties are properly migrated. Workflows will be interrupted shortly at the restart of the ECDs. These instructions will also describe how the timing of the restart of ECDs running non-scalable real-time workflows can be controlled by enabling manual upgrade. Before doing anything to the running installation, the config file for the new installation should be prepared by following these steps: Retrieve the Where Extract the values manually from the output. Copy the lines below “USER-SUPPLIED VALUES:” and stop at the blank line before “COMPUTED VALUES:”. Save the copied content to the config file Update helm repository to get the latest helm chart versions by running the following command. Retrieve the new version from the repository by running the following command. Refer to Release Information for the Helm Chart version. For example: Next, check the file CHANGELOG.md inside the created folder to find out what may have changed in the new version when it comes to the values-file. means that in the values file they should be entered as: Each part of the key does not necessarily follow directly after the previous one, but always before any other “parent” on the same level. So in this example of a an example of a key could be Make any necessary updates based on changed field you may be using in the Take note of any fields that have been deprecated or removed since the last version so any configuration of those fields can be replaced. Note! Before proceeding with the upgrade make sure : you logged in and have access the container registry. you have a valid image pull secret that allows the Kubernetes cluster to pull the container images from the container registry. update the Image Pull Secret (if needed) to the update the License Key for the upgrade version to the When you have updated the Preparations
values.yaml
file that you have used previously, or if you want to start from scratch, you extract it from the installation by running these commands:helm -n <namespace> get all <helm name>
E.g:
helm -n uepe get all uepe
uepe
is the helm name you have selected for your installation. You will see list similar to the one below.helm list
NAME NAMESPACE REVISION UPDATED STATUS CHART APP VERSION
external-dns uepe 1 2024-05-08 15:27:48.258978207 +0200 CEST deployed external-dns-7.2.0 0.14.1
ingress-nginx uepe 1 2024-05-08 16:18:43.919980224 +0200 CEST deployed ingress-nginx-4.10.0 1.10.0
uepe uepe 3 2024-05-10 14:16:17.724426589 +0200 CEST deployed usage-engine-private-edition-4.0.0 4.0.0
valuesFromSystem.yaml
.helm repo list
helm repo update
helm fetch <repo name>/usage-engine-private-edition --version <version> --untar
helm fetch digitalroute/usage-engine-private-edition --version 4.0.0 --untar
If you are uncertain about how to interpret the content of the file, see below for some examples of keys and how to interpret them:The following values have been removed:
* ```mzOperator.clusterWide```
* ```mzOperator.experimental.performPeriodicWorkflowCleanup```
* ```jmx.remote```
* ```platform.debug.jmx```
mzOperator:
clusterWide:
experimental:
performPeriodicWorkflowCleanup
jmx:
remote:
platform:
debug:
jmx:
values.yaml
file:debug:
script:
enabled: false
log:
level:
codeserver: info
jetty: 'off'
others: warn
debug.log.level.jetty
.valuesFromSystem.yaml
file you got from the existing installation so it matches the new version.valuesFromSystem.yaml
file.valuesFromSystem.yaml
file.valuesFromSystem.yaml
file you can test it by running this command:helm upgrade --install uepe digitalroute/usage-engine-private-edition --atomic --cleanup-on-fail --version 4.0.0 -n uepe -f valuesFromSystem.yaml --dry-run=server
Before you start the actual upgrade, these steps are recommended to avoid issues in processing caused by the restarts during the upgrade: Disable any batch workflow groups and let any running batch workflows finish their runs. For real-time workflows, check which types of real-time workflows the ECs are running. If an ECD hosts workflows that allow for scaling and use an ingress for incoming traffic, the ECD will, by default, be upgraded through a rolling upgrade, which means that there will always be at least one workflow running even during the upgrade. Example - Editing ECD to Manual Upgrade Option 1 Run the following command: And change manualUpgrade to true: Option 2 Run the following command: When the upgrade is completed, the ECDs can be upgraded by editing the ECD in Desktop Online.
However, if the real-time workflow does not support scaling, for example, because it uses fixed ports or storage that is not shared, the EC will become unavailable for a certain time during the upgrade. To gain control over when the EC becomes unavailable, you can edit the ECD by setting manualUpgrade
to true
before the upgrade. With this setting, the ECD will keep running on the old version until the upgrade has been performed and it can then be restarted on the new version in the EC Deployment Interface (4.3).kubectl get ecd -n <namespace>
kubectl edit ecd <ecd-name> -n namespace
spec:
.....
manualUpgrade: true
kubectl patch ecdeployment <ecd-name> -n <namespace> --type=merge -p $'spec:\n manualUpgrade: true'
When all the running batch workflows have stopped you should make a backup so that the system can be restored in case of any issues during the upgrade. Note! Before proceeding with the backup you must shut down the platform. This is very important since otherwise the backup of the database may become corrupt. The platform can be shut down in various ways, see examples below. Examples - Shutting Down the Platform Option 1 Reduce the number of replicas (under “spec”) to 0 by running the following command: where uepe is the namespace used. Option 2 Run this command: and then this command: And ensure that the pod platform-0 is no longer presentBackup and Database Upgrade
kubectl edit statefulset platform -n uepe
kubectl scale --replicas=0 sts/platform -n uepe
kubectl get pods -n uepe
Note!
The instructions for backup and upgrade of the database below are only relevant if you are using RDS as platform database. If the platform database used is derby, the backup of the EFS covers the database as well (assuming persistent storage of the platform is enabled).
List the databases and locate the one used for Usage Engine with this command:
aws rds describe-db-instances --query 'DBInstances[].DBInstanceIdentifier[]'
Perform a backup of the RDS database with this command:
aws rds create-db-snapshot --db-snapshot-identifier <database backup name> --db-instance-identifier <database instance name>
for example:
aws rds create-db-snapshot --db-snapshot-identifier uepe-eks-db-postgresql-backup --db-instance-identifier uepe-eks-db-postgresql
Check if the backup was created successfully by running this command:
aws rds describe-db-snapshots --snapshot-type manual --db-snapshot-identifier <database backup name>
It is now time to do a backup of the file system used.
Note!
If there are standalone ECs that are still running and writing their logs to the same EFS, whatever happens after the backup has been initiated will not be included in the backup.
To create an EFS backup using the console, see https://docs.aws.amazon.com/aws-backup/latest/devguide/recov-point-create-on-demand-backup.html for instructions.
The section below contains an example of how to run an on-demand backup job using the command line. The snapshot will in this case be stored under the default backup vault.
export EFS_NAME=uepe-eks-efs-disk export EFS_FILE_SYSTEM_ID=$(aws efs describe-file-systems --query "FileSystems[?Name==\`$EFS_NAME\`].FileSystemId" --output text) export EFS_ARN=$(aws efs describe-file-systems --query "FileSystems[?Name==\`$EFS_NAME\`].FileSystemArn" --output text) export VAULT_NAME=Default export BACKUP_ROLE_ARN=$(aws iam get-role --role-name AWSBackupDefaultServiceRole --query "Role.Arn" --output text) # Run on demand backup job aws backup start-backup-job \ --backup-vault-name $VAULT_NAME \ --resource-arn $EFS_ARN \ --iam-role-arn $BACKUP_ROLE_ARN # View backup job status aws backup list-backup-jobs --by-resource-type EFS
To perform the actual upgrade you should use the same command as the test command described earlier minus the If the upgrade was successful, the output will look like this: Scale up the platform stateful set again so the platform starts back up using the following command:Upgrade
--dry-run=server
flag, for example like this:helm upgrade --install uepe digitalroute/usage-engine-private-edition --atomic --cleanup-on-fail --version 4.0.0 -n uepe -f valuesFromSystem.yaml
helm upgrade --install uepe digitalroute/usage-engine-private-edition --atomic --cleanup-on-fail --version 4.0.0 -n uepe -f valuesFromSystem.yaml
Release "uepe" has been upgraded. Happy Helming!
NAME: uepe
LAST DEPLOYED: Fri May 10 15:02:37 2024
NAMESPACE: uepe
STATUS: deployed
REVISION: 4
TEST SUITE: None
NOTES:
Usage Engine Private Edition 4.0.0 has been deployed successfully!
Check out the CHANGELOG.md in this chart for information about what has been changed, added and removed in this version.
kubectl scale --replicas=1 sts/platform -n uepe
When the Usage Engine installation has been upgraded, ensure that any ECDs supporting rolling upgrade are still running as expected. If there are ECDs that have been configured for manual upgrade before the upgrade, see the section below. Also ensure to enable any batch workflow groups again so that the batch processing can start again.After Upgrade
If you configured any ECDs to manual upgrade before the upgrade, follow these steps to upgrade these ECDs when the regular upgrade is completed: Login to Desktop Online, see Desktop Online User Interface (4.3). Go to the EC Deployment Interface (4.3) in the Manage view in Desktop Online. Click on the ECD(s) to view the warnings. If there are ECDs that need to be upgraded, you will see a Message saying that it needs to be upgraded for each ECD. Go back to the list of ECDs, click on the three dots to far right in the ECD row, and select the Upgrade option in the pop-up menu.Manual Upgrade of ECDs
You will see a warning symbol next to the relevant ECDs.
Rollback procedure only be carried out in case user wants to rollback to the previous version. The following steps are performed in rollback. Restore database backup Restore file system snapshot Rollback Usage Engine Private Edition to pre-upgrade versionRollback
Restore database backup
If restoring becomes necessary, you can restore the DB instance from a snapshot backup, see the AWS guide https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonRDS/latest/UserGuide/USER_RestoreFromSnapshot.html for more information.
You can also restore a new DB instance using the commands below:
export EXISTING_DB=uepe-eks-db-postgresql export NEW_DB=uepe-eks-db-postgresql-2 export SNAPSHOT=uepe-eks-db-postgresql-backup export INSTANCE_CLASS=db.t3.small export SUBNET_GROUP_NAME=$(aws rds describe-db-instances --query "DBInstances[?DBInstanceIdentifier==\`$EXISTING_DB\`].DBSubnetGroup.DBSubnetGroupName" --output text) export SECURITY_GROUP_ID=$(aws rds describe-db-instances --query "DBInstances[?DBInstanceIdentifier==\`$EXISTING_DB\`].VpcSecurityGroups[].VpcSecurityGroupId" --output text) # Restore snapshot to a new database aws rds restore-db-instance-from-db-snapshot \ --db-instance-identifier $NEW_DB \ --db-snapshot-identifier $SNAPSHOT \ --db-instance-class $INSTANCE_CLASS \ --db-subnet-group-name $SUBNET_GROUP_NAME \ --vpc-security-group-ids=$SECURITY_GROUP_ID # Rename existing DB instance to other name aws rds modify-db-instance \ --db-instance-identifier $EXISTING_DB \ --new-db-instance-identifier $EXISTING_DB-old \ --apply-immediately # Rename the new DB instance to use existing identifier name aws rds modify-db-instance \ --db-instance-identifier $NEW_DB \ --new-db-instance-identifier $EXISTING_DB \ --apply-immediately
If you are using the console to do the RDS restore, remember to include the existing database security group so that it can be accessible by the cluster.
Note!
The restored RDS instance is a new database instance and is not managed by Terraform. If you plan to destroy the cluster later, ensure that the new database instance is deleted first. This is necessary because the database instance may still reference to the RDS subnet group.
Restore file system snapshot
To restore EFS, follow the instructions in https://docs.aws.amazon.com/aws-backup/latest/devguide/restore-resource.html and https://repost.aws/knowledge-center/aws-backup-restore-efs-file-system-cli.
The section below contains an example of how to restore the EFS backup using the command line. In this example the volume mount is using access point path /uepe
, and the snapshot is stored under default vault, and then the backup is restored to the existing file system.
export EFS_NAME=uepe-eks-efs-disk export EFS_FILE_SYSTEM_ID=$(aws efs describe-file-systems --query "FileSystems[?Name==\`$EFS_NAME\`].FileSystemId" --output text) export EFS_ARN=$(aws efs describe-file-systems --query "FileSystems[?Name==\`$EFS_NAME\`].FileSystemArn" --output text) export VAULT_NAME=Default export BACKUP_ROLE_ARN=$(aws iam get-role --role-name AWSBackupDefaultServiceRole --query "Role.Arn" --output text) #################### Retrieve backup ARN id #################### aws backup list-recovery-points-by-backup-vault --backup-vault-name $VAULT_NAME # NOTE: Record the RecoveryPointArn that you wish to recover from # e.g. arn:aws:backup:ap-southeast-1:027763730008:recovery-point:0a82d94c-3d56-481d-98e3-b810d3df363b # To view the recovery point restore metadata aws backup get-recovery-point-restore-metadata \ --backup-vault-name $VAULT_NAME \ --recovery-point-arn <RECOVERY_POINT_ARN> #################### Restore from the backup #################### # Prerequisites: # 1) Generate an UUID, "uuidgen" (Mac) or "uuid -r" (Linux) # 2) Create a metadata json file, properties details are mentioned in # https://docs.aws.amazon.com/aws-backup/latest/devguide/restoring-efs.html#efs-restore-cli # NOTE: If newFileSystem=true, file-system-id parameter will be ignored. # 3) Substitute "CreationToken" value with the generated UUID. # 4) If existing file system is encrypted, you may use the existing KMS key. # # Example metadata json: cat <<-EOF > /path/to/metadata_json_file { "file-system-id": "$EFS_FILE_SYSTEM_ID", "Encrypted": "true", "KmsKeyId": "arn:aws:kms:ap-southeast-1:027763730008:key/4859a845-3ef2-464d-80d2-16c1b2c58ff4", "PerformanceMode": "generalPurpose", "CreationToken": "FEC83B16-F43A-4D5A-A678-2D27FC6C7DBD", "newFileSystem": "false" } EOF aws backup start-restore-job --recovery-point-arn <RECOVERY_POINT_ARN> --iam-role-arn "$BACKUP_ROLE_ARN" --metadata file:///path/to/metadata_json_file watch aws backup list-restore-jobs --by-resource-type EFS #################### Run a pod with command prompt #################### kubectl run nfscli --rm --tty -i --restart='Never' --namespace uepe --image oraclelinux:8 --privileged=true --command -- bash #################### Install NFS client #################### [root@nfscli /]# yum -y install nfs-utils #################### Make a folder for mounting purpose #################### [root@nfscli /]# mkdir -p /mnt/efs #################### Mount EFS volume root path #################### # EFS DNS name in format <file-system-id>.efs.<aws-region>.amazonaws.com [root@nfscli /]# mount -o nolock fs-0a3a60103ae00a5a1.efs.ap-southeast-1.amazonaws.com:/ /mnt/efs #################### Locate the restored directory #################### # Go to the mounted directory [root@nfscli /]# cd /mnt/efs/ # List folders # NOTE: Existing platform volume mount folder is 'uepe' folder [root@nfscli efs]# ls -al total 16 drwxr-xr-x 5 root root 6144 Aug 13 06:35 . drwxr-xr-x 1 root root 18 Aug 14 10:37 .. drwxr-xr-x 5 root root 6144 Aug 13 06:35 aws-backup-restore_2024-08-13T17-58-42-978741167Z drwxr-xr-x 9 6000 6000 6144 Aug 13 18:47 uepe # The restored data folder which is also called 'uepe', it is located under aws-backup-restore_<timestamp> folder. [root@nfscli efs]# ls -al aws-backup-restore_2024-08-13T17-58-42-978741167Z/ total 20 drwxr-xr-x 5 root root 6144 Aug 13 06:35 . drwxr-xr-x 5 root root 6144 Aug 13 06:35 .. drw--w---- 2 root root 6144 Aug 13 17:58 aws-backup-lost+found_2024-08-13T17-58-13-086602146Z drwxr-xr-x 2 6000 6000 6144 Aug 13 18:57 uepe #################### Cleanup existing platform volume mount folder #################### [root@nfscli efs]# rm -rf uepe/* #################### Copy restored data to platform volume mount folder #################### # NOTE: Specify '-p' flag in the cp commmand to preserve file permissions and timestamp. [root@nfscli efs]# cp -rfp aws-backup-restore_2024-08-13T17-58-42-978741167Z/uepe/* uepe/ # Check if all datas are copied [root@nfscli efs]# ls -al uepe/ total 48 drwxr-xr-x 9 6000 6000 6144 Aug 13 18:47 . drwxr-xr-x 5 root root 6144 Aug 13 06:35 .. drwxr-xr-x 2 6000 6000 6144 Aug 13 06:37 3pp drwxr-xr-x 2 6000 6000 6144 Aug 13 06:37 backup drwxr-xr-x 2 6000 6000 6144 Aug 13 06:37 jni drwxr-xr-x 2 6000 6000 6144 Aug 13 06:37 keys drwxr-xr-x 5 6000 6000 6144 Aug 13 17:13 log drwxr-xr-x 3 6000 6000 6144 Aug 13 06:37 pico-cache drwxr-xr-x 2 6000 6000 6144 Aug 13 06:37 storage #################### Clean up the redundant restored data #################### [root@nfscli efs]# rm -rf aws-backup-restore_2024-08-13T17-58-42-978741167Z/uepe/* #################### Unmount volume and exit pod #################### [root@nfscli efs]# umount /mnt/efs/ [root@nfscli efs]# exit #################### Restore completed #################### # Backup data has been restored, proceed to the next section to rollback UEPE.
To rollback to pre-upgrade version, check the history to see the revision numbers Rollback to pre-upgrade version with revision <pre-upgrade-revision-number>Rollback Usage Engine Private Edition to pre-upgrade version
helm history uepe -n uepe
helm rollback uepe <pre-upgrade-revision-number> -n uepe