Files
neon/compute_tools
Shockingly Good 4d2e4b19c3 fix(compute) Correct the PGXN s3 gateway URL. (#11796)
Corrects the postgres extension s3 gateway address to
be not just a domain name but a full base URL.

To make the code more readable, the option is renamed
to "remote_ext_base_url", while keeping the old name
also accessible by providing a clap argument alias.

Also provides a very simple and, perhaps, even redundant
unit test to confirm the logic behind parsing of the
corresponding CLI argument.

## Problem

As it is clearly stated in
https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/26005, using of the short
version of the domain name might work for now, but in the future, we
should get rid of using the `default` namespace and this is where it
will, most likely, break down.

## Summary of changes

The changes adjust the domain name of the extension s3 gateway to use
the proper base url format instead of the just domain name assuming the
"default" namespace and add a new CLI argument name for to reflect the
change and the expectance.
2025-05-07 16:34:08 +00:00
..
2024-03-20 17:10:46 -05:00

Compute node tools

Postgres wrapper (compute_ctl) is intended to be run as a Docker entrypoint or as a systemd ExecStart option. It will handle all the Neon specifics during compute node initialization:

  • compute_ctl accepts cluster (compute node) specification as a JSON file.
  • Every start is a fresh start, so the data directory is removed and initialized again on each run.
  • Next it will put configuration files into the PGDATA directory.
  • Sync safekeepers and get commit LSN.
  • Get basebackup from pageserver using the returned on the previous step LSN.
  • Try to start postgres and wait until it is ready to accept connections.
  • Check and alter/drop/create roles and databases.
  • Hang waiting on the postmaster process to exit.

Also compute_ctl spawns two separate service threads:

  • compute-monitor checks the last Postgres activity timestamp and saves it into the shared ComputeNode;
  • http-endpoint runs a Hyper HTTP API server, which serves readiness and the last activity requests.

If AUTOSCALING environment variable is set, compute_ctl will start the vm-monitor located in [neon/libs/vm_monitor]. For VM compute nodes, vm-monitor communicates with the VM autoscaling system. It coordinates downscaling and requests immediate upscaling under resource pressure.

Usage example:

compute_ctl -D /var/db/postgres/compute \
            -C 'postgresql://cloud_admin@localhost/postgres' \
            -S /var/db/postgres/specs/current.json \
            -b /usr/local/bin/postgres

State Diagram

Computes can be in various states. Below is a diagram that details how a compute moves between states.

%% https://mermaid.js.org/syntax/stateDiagram.html
stateDiagram-v2
  [*] --> Empty : Compute spawned
  Empty --> ConfigurationPending : Waiting for compute spec
  ConfigurationPending --> Configuration : Received compute spec
  Configuration --> Failed : Failed to configure the compute
  Configuration --> Running : Compute has been configured
  Empty --> Init : Compute spec is immediately available
  Empty --> TerminationPending : Requested termination
  Init --> Failed : Failed to start Postgres
  Init --> Running : Started Postgres
  Running --> TerminationPending : Requested termination
  TerminationPending --> Terminated : Terminated compute
  Failed --> [*] : Compute exited
  Terminated --> [*] : Compute exited

Tests

Cargo formatter:

cargo fmt

Run tests:

cargo test

Clippy linter:

cargo clippy --all --all-targets -- -Dwarnings -Drust-2018-idioms

Cross-platform compilation

Imaging that you are on macOS (x86) and you want a Linux GNU (x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu platform in rust terminology) executable.

Using docker

You can use a throw-away Docker container (rustlang/rust image) for doing that:

docker run --rm \
    -v $(pwd):/compute_tools \
    -w /compute_tools \
    -t rustlang/rust:nightly cargo build --release --target=x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu

or one-line:

docker run --rm -v $(pwd):/compute_tools -w /compute_tools -t rust:latest cargo build --release --target=x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu

Using rust native cross-compilation

Another way is to add x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu target on your host system:

rustup target add x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu

Install macOS cross-compiler toolchain:

brew tap SergioBenitez/osxct
brew install x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu

And finally run cargo build:

CARGO_TARGET_X86_64_UNKNOWN_LINUX_GNU_LINKER=x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu-gcc cargo build --target=x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu --release