Zookeeper Reference
Solr Clouds require an Apache Zookeeper to connect to.
The Solr operator gives a few options.
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Connecting to an already running zookeeper ensemble via connection strings
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Spinning up a provided Zookeeper Ensemble in the same namespace via the Zookeeper Operator
These options are configured under spec.zookeeperRef
Chroot
Both options below come with options to specify a chroot, or a ZNode path for solr to use as it’s base "directory" in Zookeeper.
Before the operator creates or updates a StatefulSet with a given chroot, it will first ensure that the given ZNode path exists and if it doesn’t the operator will create all necessary ZNodes in the path.
If no chroot is given, a default of / will be used, which doesn’t require the existence check previously mentioned.
If a chroot is provided without a prefix of /, the operator will add the prefix, as it is required by Zookeeper.
ZK Connection Info
This is an external/internal connection string as well as an optional chRoot to an already running Zookeeeper ensemble. If you provide an external connection string, you do not have to provide an internal one as well.
Under spec.zookeeperRef:
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connectionInfo-
externalConnectionString- The ZK connection string to the external Zookeeper cluster, e.g.zoo1:2181 -
chroot- The chroot to use for the cluster
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ACLs
The Solr Operator allows for users to specify ZK ACL references in their Solr Cloud CRDs. The user must specify the name of a secret that resides in the same namespace as the cloud, that contains an ACL username value and an ACL password value. This ACL must have admin permissions for the chroot given.
The ACL information can be provided through an ADMIN acl and a READ ONLY acl.
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Admin:
SolrCloud.spec.zookeeperRef.connectionInfo.acl -
Read Only:
SolrCloud.spec.zookeeperRef.connectionInfo.readOnlyAcl
All ACL fields are required if an ACL is used.
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secret- The name of the secret, in the same namespace as the SolrCloud, that contains the admin ACL username and password. -
usernameKey- The name of the key in the provided secret that stores the admin ACL username. -
passwordKey- The name of the key in the provided secret that stores the admin ACL password.
Provided Instance
If you do not require the Solr cloud to run cross-kube cluster, and do not want to manage your own Zookeeper ensemble, the solr-operator can manage Zookeeper ensemble(s) for you.
Using the zookeeper-operator, a new Zookeeper ensemble can be spun up for each solrCloud that has this option specified.
The startup parameter zookeeper-operator must be provided on startup of the solr-operator for this parameter to be available.
Zookeeper Storage Options
The Zookeeper Operator allows for both ephemeral and persistent storage, and the Solr Operator supports both as of v0.4.0.
spec:
zookeeperRef:
provided:
ephemeral:
emptydirvolumesource: {}
persistence:
reclaimPolicy: "Retain" # Either Retain or Delete
spec: {} # PVC Spec for the Zookeeper volumes
By default, if you do not provide either ephemeral or persistence, the Solr Operator will default to the type of storage you are using for your Solr pods.
However, if you provide either object above, even if the object is empty, that storage type will be used for the created Zookeeper pods.
If both ephemeral and persistence is provided, then persistence is preferred.
ACLs for Provided Ensembles
If you want Solr to set ZK ACLs for znodes it creates in the provided ensemble, you can supply ACL credentials for an ADMIN and optionally a READ ONLY user using the following config settings:
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Admin:
SolrCloud.spec.zookeeperRef.provided.acl -
Read Only:
SolrCloud.spec.zookeeperRef.provided.readOnlyAcl
All ACL fields are required if an ACL is used.
-
secret- The name of the secret, in the same namespace as the SolrCloud, that contains the ACL username and password. -
usernameKey- The name of the key in the provided secret that stores the admin ACL username. -
passwordKey- The name of the key in the provided secret that stores the admin ACL password.
There is a known issue with the Zookeeper operator where it deploys pods with skipACL=yes, see: https://github.com/pravega/zookeeper-operator/issues/316.
This means that even if Solr sets the ACLs on znodes, they will not be enforced by Zookeeper. If your organization requires Solr to use ZK ACLs, then you’ll need to
deploy Zookeeper to Kubernetes using another approach, such as using a Helm chart.
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