The Postgres Operator enables highly-available PostgreSQL clusters on Kubernetes (K8s) powered by Patroni. It is configured only through manifests to ease integration into automated CI/CD pipelines with no access to Kubernetes directly.
- Rolling updates on Postgres cluster changes
- Volume resize without Pod restarts
- Cloning Postgres clusters
- Logical Backups to S3 Bucket
- Standby cluster from S3 WAL archive
- Configurable for non-cloud environments
- UI to create and edit Postgres cluster manifests
- Supports PostgreSQL 9.6+
- Streaming replication cluster via Patroni
- Point-In-Time-Recovery with pg_basebackup / WAL-E via Spilo
- Preload libraries: bg_mon, pg_stat_statements, pgextwlist, pg_auth_mon
- Incl. popular Postgres extensions such as decoderbufs, hypopg, pg_cron, pg_partman, pg_stat_kcache, pgq, plpgsql_check, postgis, set_user and timescaledb
The Postgres Operator has been developed at Zalando and is being used in production for over two years.
For a quick first impression follow the instructions of this tutorial.
There is a browser-friendly version of this documentation at postgres-operator.readthedocs.io
- How it works
- Installation
- The Postgres experience on K8s
- The Postgres Operator UI
- DBA options - from RBAC to backup
- Build, debug and extend the operator
- Configuration options
- Postgres manifest reference
- Command-line options and environment variables
The Postgres Operator made it to the Google Summer of Code 2019! Check our ideas and start discussions in the issue tracker.
There are two places to get in touch with the community:
- The GitHub issue tracker
- The #postgres-operator slack channel