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An SQL provider for @crossplane

Crossplane Provider for SQL

A Crossplane provider for SQL. A Crossplane provider for RDBMS schema management/manipulation. Note that provider-sql orchestrates relational database servers by creating databases, users, etc. It does not create server instances themselves. provider-sql can be used in conjunction with other providers (e.g. provider-azure) to define a composite resource that creates both an RDBMS server and a new database schema.

To reduce load on the managed databases and increase responsiveness with many managed resources, this provider reconciles its managed resources every 10 minutes.

It currently supports MySQL, PostgreSQL and MSSQL.

Install

Install the provider by using the following command after changing the image tag to the latest release:

cat << EOF | kubectl apply -f -
apiVersion: pkg.crossplane.io/v1
kind: Provider
metadata:
  name: provider-sql
spec:
  package: xpkg.upbound.io/crossplane-contrib/provider-sql:v0.9.0
EOF

Alternatively, you can use Crossplane CLI:

up ctp provider install xpkg.upbound.io/crossplane-contrib/provider-sql:v0.9.0

Check the example:

  • Provider
  • deploymentRuntimeConfig

Usage

  1. Create a connection secret:

    To create provider-sql managed resources, you will first need a K8s secret with the connection details to an existing SQL server.

    This secret could either be created automatically by provisioning an SQL server with a Crossplane provider (e.g. a CloudSQLInstance with provider-gcp) or you can create for an existing server as follows:

    kubectl create secret generic db-conn \
      --from-literal=username=admin \
      --from-literal=password='t0ps3cr3t' \
      --from-literal=endpoint=my.sql-server.com \
      --from-literal=port=3306
    
  2. Create managed resources for your SQL server flavor:

    • MySQL: Database, Grant, User (See the examples)
    • PostgreSQL: Database, Grant, Extension, Role (See the examples)
    • MSSQL: Database, Grant, User (See the examples)

Contributing

  1. Fork the project and clone locally.
  2. Create a branch with the changes.
  3. Install go version 1.18.
  4. Run make to initialize the "build". Make submodules used for CI/CD.
  5. Run make reviewable to run code generation, linters, and tests.
  6. Commit, push, and PR.