Connecting from an application v1

Applications are supposed to work with the services created by EDB Postgres for Kubernetes in the same Kubernetes cluster.

For more information on services and how to manage them, please refer to the "Service management" section.

Hint

It is highly recommended using those services in your applications, and avoiding connecting directly to a specific PostgreSQL instance, as the latter can change during the cluster lifetime.

You can use these services in your applications through:

  • DNS resolution
  • environment variables

For the credentials to connect to PostgreSQL, you can use the secrets generated by the operator.

Connection Pooling

Please refer to the "Connection Pooling" section for information about how to take advantage of PgBouncer as a connection pooler, and create an access layer between your applications and the PostgreSQL clusters.

DNS resolution

You can use the Kubernetes DNS service to point to a given server. The Kubernetes DNS service is required by the operator. You can do that by using the name of the service if the application is deployed in the same namespace as the PostgreSQL cluster. In case the PostgreSQL cluster resides in a different namespace, you can use the full qualifier: service-name.namespace-name.

DNS is the preferred and recommended discovery method.

Environment variables

If you deploy your application in the same namespace that contains the PostgreSQL cluster, you can also use environment variables to connect to the database.

For example, suppose that your PostgreSQL cluster is called pg-database, you can use the following environment variables in your applications:

  • PG_DATABASE_R_SERVICE_HOST: the IP address of the service pointing to all the PostgreSQL instances for read-only workloads

  • PG_DATABASE_RO_SERVICE_HOST: the IP address of the service pointing to all hot-standby replicas of the cluster

  • PG_DATABASE_RW_SERVICE_HOST: the IP address of the service pointing to the primary instance of the cluster

Secrets

The PostgreSQL operator will generate up to two basic-auth type secrets for every PostgreSQL cluster it deploys:

  • [cluster name]-app (unless you have provided an existing secret through .spec.bootstrap.initdb.secret.name)
  • [cluster name]-superuser (if .spec.enableSuperuserAccess is set to true and you have not specified a different secret using .spec.superuserSecret)

Each secret contain the following:

The -app credentials are the ones that should be used by applications connecting to the PostgreSQL cluster, and correspond to the user owning the database.

The -superuser ones are supposed to be used only for administrative purposes, and correspond to the postgres user.

Important

Superuser access over the network is disabled by default.