InfluxDB Clustered

Version: 20231213-791734

# yaml-language-server: $schema=app-instance-schema.json
apiVersion: kubecfg.dev/v1alpha1
kind: AppInstance
metadata:
  name: influxdb
  namespace: influxdb
spec:
  # One or more secrets that are used to pull the images from an authenticated registry.
  # This will either be the secret provided to you, if using our registry, or a secret for your own registry
  # if self-hosting the images.
  imagePullSecrets:
    - name: <name of the secret>
  package:
    # The version of the clustered package that will be used.
    # This determines the version of all of the individual components.
    # When a new version of the product is released, this version should be updated and any
    # new config options should be updated below.
    image: us-docker.pkg.dev/influxdb2-artifacts/clustered/influxdb:20231213-791734
    apiVersion: influxdata.com/v1alpha1
    spec:
      # Provides a way to pass down hosting environment specific configuration, such as an role ARN when using EKS IRSA.
      # hostingEnvironment:
      #   aws:
      #     eksRoleArn: 'arn:aws:iam::111111111111:role/your-influxdb-clustered-role'
      #
      #   A blank openshift object should be used to specify that changes should be made which cater to OpenShift.
      #   openshift: {}
      #
      #   gke:
      #     Authenticate to Google Cloud services via workload identity, this
      #     annotates the 'iox' ServiceAccount with the role name you specify.
      #     NOTE: This requires a blank `objectStore.google` block in your
      #     configuration to ensure that InfluxDB knows which Google auth mode to run.
      #     workloadIdentity:
      #
      #       Google Service Account name to use for the workload identity.
      #       accountName: <secret name>
      #
      #       Your Google Cloud Platform project ID.
      #       projectId: <path>
      catalog:
        # A postgresql style DSN that points at a postgresql compatible database.
        # eg: postgres://[user[:password]@][netloc][:port][/dbname][?param1=value1&...]
        dsn:
          valueFrom:
            secretKeyRef:
              name: <your secret name here>
              key: <the key in the secret that contains the dsn>

      # images:
      #   # This can be used to override a specific image name with its FQIN
      #   # (Fully Qualified Image Name) for testing. eg.
      #   overrides:
      #     - name: influxdb2-artifacts/iox/iox
      #       newFQIN: mycompany/test-iox-build:aninformativetag
      #
      #   # Set this variable to the prefix of your internal registry. This will be prefixed to all expected images.
      #   # eg. us-docker.pkg.dev/iox:latest => registry.mycompany.io/us-docker.pkg.dev/iox:latest
      #   registryOverride: <the domain name portion of your registry (registry.mycompany.io in the example above)>

      objectStore:
        # Bucket that the parquet files will be stored in
        bucket: <bucket name>

        # Uncomment one of the following (s3, azure)
        # to enable the configuration of your object store
        s3:
          # URL for S3 Compatible object store
          endpoint: <S3 url>

          # Set to true to allow communication over HTTP (instead of HTTPS)
          allowHttp: "false"

          # S3 Access Key
          # This can also be provided as a valueFrom: secretKeyRef:
          accessKey:
            value: <your access key>

          # S3 Secret Key
          # This can also be provided as a valueFrom: secretKeyRef:
          secretKey:
            value: <your secret>

          # This value is required for AWS S3, it may or may not be required for other providers.
          region: <region>

        # azure:
        #   Azure Blob Storage Access Key
        #   This can also be provided as a valueFrom: secretKeyRef:
        #   accessKey:
        #     value: <your access key>

        #   Azure Blob Storage Account
        #   This can also be provided as a valueFrom: secretKeyRef:
        #   account:
        #     value: <your access key>

        # google:
        #   Authenticate to Google Cloud services using a Service Account credentials file.
        #   You must create a Kubernetes Secret containing the appropriate value and provide
        #   its name here.
        #   serviceAccountSecret:
        #
        #     Kubernetes Secret name containing the credentials for a
        #     Google IAM Service Account.
        #     name: <secret name>
        #
        #     The key within the Secret containing the credentials, this
        #     will be mounted onto the relevant pods.
        #     key: <key name>

      # Ingester pods have a volume attached.
      ingesterStorage:
        # (Optional) Set the storage class. This will differ based on the K8s environment and desired storage characteristics.
        # If not set, the default storage class will be used.
        # storageClassName: <storage-class>
        # Set the storage size (minimum 2Gi recommended)
        storage: <storage-size>

      # Monitoring pods have a volume attached.
      monitoringStorage:
        # (Optional) Set the storage class. This will differ based on the K8s environment and desired storage characteristics.
        # If not set, the default storage class will be used.
        # storageClassName: <storage-class>
        # Set the storage size (minimum 1Gi recommended)
        storage: <storage-size>

      # Uncomment the follow block if using our provided Ingress.
      #
      # We currently only support the ingress NGINX ingress controller: https://github.com/kubernetes/ingress-nginx
      #
      # ingress:
      #   hosts:
      #     # This is the host on which you will access Influxdb 3.0, for both reads and writes
      #     - <influxdb-host>

      #   (Optional)
      #   The name of the Kubernetes Secret containing a TLS certificate, this should exist in the same namespace as the Clustered installation.
      #   If you are using cert-manager, enter a name for the Secret it should create.
      #   tlsSecretName: <secret-name>

      #   http:
      #     # Usually you have only one ingress controller installed in a given cluster.
      #     # In case you have more than one, you have to specify the "class name" of the ingress controller you want to use
      #     className: nginx

      #   grpc:
      #     # Usually you have only one ingress controller installed in a given cluster.
      #     # In case you have more than one, you have to specify the "class name" of the ingress controller you want to use
      #     className: nginx
      #
      #   Enables specifying which 'type' of Ingress to use, alongside whether to place additional annotations
      #   onto those objects, this is useful for third party software in your environment, such as cert-manager.
      #   template:
      #     apiVersion: 'route.openshift.io/v1'
      #     kind: 'Route'
      #     metadata:
      #       annotations:
      #         'example-annotation': 'annotation-value'

      # Enables specifying customizations for the various components in InfluxDB 3.0.
      # components:
      #   # One of "router", "ingester", "querier", "compactor"
      # # router:
      #   # template:
      #     # nodeSelector:
      #       # disktype: ssd
      #     # tolerations:
      #       #  - effect: NoSchedule
      #       #    key: example
      #       #    operator: Exists
      #   # Common customizations for all components go in a pseudo-component called "common"
      # # common:
      #   # template:
      #     # # Metadata contains custom annotations (and labels) to be added to a component. E.g.:
      #     # metadata:
      #     #   annotations:
      #     #     telegraf.influxdata.com/class: "foo"

      # Uncomment the following block to tune the various pods for their cpu/memory/replicas based on workload needs.
      # Only uncomment the specific resources you want to change, anything uncommented will use the package default.
      # (You can read more about k8s resources and limits in https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/manage-resources-containers/#requests-and-limits)
      #
      # resources:
      #   # The ingester handles data being written
      #   ingester:
      #     requests:
      #       cpu: <cpu amount>
      #       memory: <ram amount>
      #       replicas: <num replicas> # The default for ingesters is 3 to increase availability
      #
      #     # optionally you can specify the resource limits which improves isolation.
      #     # (see https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/manage-resources-containers/#requests-and-limits)
      #     # limits:
      #     #   cpu: <cpu amount>
      #     #   memory: <ram amount>

      #   # The compactor reorganizes old data to improve query and storage efficiency.
      #   compactor:
      #     requests:
      #       cpu: <cpu amount>
      #       memory: <ram amount>
      #       replicas: <num replicas> # the default is 1

      #   # The querier handles querying data.
      #   querier:
      #     requests:
      #       cpu: <cpu amount>
      #       memory: <ram amount>
      #       replicas: <num replicas> # the default is 1

      #   # The router performs some api routing.
      #   router:
      #     requests:
      #       cpu: <cpu amount>
      #       memory: <ram amount>
      #       replicas: <num replicas> # the default is 1

      admin:
        # The list of users to grant access to Clustered via influxctl
        users:
          # First name of user
          - firstName: <first-name>
            # Last name of user
            lastName: <last-name>
            # Email of user
            email: <email>
            # The ID that the configured Identity Provider uses for the user in oauth flows
            id: <id>

        # The dsn for the postgres compatible database (note this is the same as defined above)
        dsn:
          valueFrom:
            secretKeyRef:
              name: <secret name>
              key: <dsn key>
        # The identity provider to be used e.g. "keycloak", "auth0", "azure", etc
        # Note for Azure Active Directory it must be exactly "azure"
        identityProvider: <identity-provider>
        # The JWKS endpoint provided by the Identity Provider
        jwksEndpoint: <endpoint>

      #  # This (optional) section controls how InfluxDB issues outbound requests to other services
      #  egress:
      #    # If you're using a custom CA you will need to specify the full custom CA bundle here.
      #    #
      #    # NOTE: the custom CA is currently only honoured for outbound requests used to obtain
      #    # the JWT public keys from your identiy provider (see `jwksEndpoint`).
      #    customCertificates:
      #      valueFrom:
      #        configMapKeyRef:
      #          key: ca.pem
      #          name: custom-ca

      # We also include the ability to enable some features that are not yet ready for general availability
      # or for which we don't yet have a proper place to turn on an optional feature in the configuration file.
      # To turn on these you should include the name of the feature flag in the `featureFlag` array.
      #
      # featureFlags:
      #  # Uncomment to install a Grafana deployment with some recommended dashboards.
      #  # Depends on one of the prometheus features being deployed.
      #  # - grafana

      #  # The following 2 flags should be uncommented for k8s API 1.21 support.
      #  # Note that this is an experimental configuration.
      #  # - noMinReadySeconds
      #  # - noGrpcProbes