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Quickstart: Configure a hybrid cluster with Azure Managed Instance for Apache Cassandra using Client Configurator

The Azure Client configurator is a tool designed to assist you in configuring a hybrid cluster and simplifying the migration process to Azure Managed Instance for Apache Cassandra. If you currently have on-premises datacenters or are operating in a self-hosted environment, you can use Azure Managed Instance for Apache Cassandra to seamlessly incorporate other datacenters into your cluster while effectively maintaining them.

Important

Client Configurator tool is in public preview. This feature is provided without a service level agreement, and it's not recommended for production workloads. For more information, see Supplemental Terms of Use for Microsoft Azure Previews.

Prerequisites

  • This article requires the Azure CLI version 2.30.0 or higher. If you are using Azure Cloud Shell, the latest version is already installed.

  • Azure Virtual Network with connectivity to your self-hosted or on-premises environment. For more information on connecting on premises environments to Azure, see the Connect an on-premises network to Azure article.

  • Python installation is required. You can check if python is installed by running python --version in your terminal.

  • Ensure that both the Azure Managed Instance and on-premises Cassandra cluster are located on the same virtual network. If not, it is necessary to establish network peering or other means of connectivity (for example, express route).

  • The cluster name for both the Managed cluster and local cluster must be the same. * In the cassandra.yaml file ensure the storage port is set to 7001 and the cluster name is same as the managed cluster:

cluster_name: managed_cluster-name
storage_port: 7001
UPDATE system.local SET cluster_name = 'managed_cluster-name' where key='local';

Installation

python3 -m venv env
source env/bin/activate
python3 -m pip install -r requirements.txt
  • Sign into Azure CLI az login
  • Run the python script within the client folder with information from the existing (on-premises) cluster:
python3 client_configurator.py --subscription-id <subcriptionId> --cluster-resource-group <clusterResourceGroup> --cluster-name <clusterName> --initial-password <initialPassword> --vnet-resource-group <vnetResourceGroup> --vnet-name <vnetName> --subnet-name <subnetName> --location <location> --seed-nodes <seed1 seed2 seed3> --mi-dc-name <managedInstanceDataCenterName> --dc-name <onPremDataCenterName> --sku <sku>

Note

  • subscription-id: Azure subscription id.
  • cluster-resource-group: Resource group which your cluster resides.
  • cluster-name: Azure Managed Instance cluster name.
  • initial-password: Password for your Azure Managed Instance for Apache Cassandra cluster.
  • vnet-resource-group: The resource group attached to the virtual network.
  • vnet-name: Name of the virtual network attached to your cluster.
  • subnet-name: The name of the IP addressed allocated to the Cassandra cluster.
  • location: Where your cluster is deployed.
  • seed-nodes: The seed nodes of the existing datacenters in your on-premises or self-hosted Cassandra cluster.
  • mi-dc-name: The data center name of your Azure Managed Instance cluster.
  • dc-name: The data center name of the on-prem cluster.
  • sku: The virtual machine SKU size.
  • The Python script produces a tar archive named install_certs.tar.gz. * Unpack this folder into /etc/cassandra/ on each node.

    sudo tar -xzvf install_certs.tar.gz -C /etc/cassandra
    
  • Inside the /etc/cassandra/ folder, run sudo ./install_certs.sh.

    • Ensure that the script is executable by running sudo chmod +x install_certs.sh.
    • The script installs and point Cassandra towards the new certs needed to connect to the Azure Managed Instance cluster.
    • It then prompts user to restart Cassandra. Screenshot of the result of running the script.
  • Once Cassandra is done restarting on all nodes, check nodetool status. Both datacenters should appear in the list, with their nodes in the UN (Up/Normal) state.

  • From your Azure Managed Instance for Apache Cassandra, you can then select AllKeyspaces to change the replication settings in your Keyspace schema and start the migration process to Cassandra Managed Instance cluster.

    Screenshot of selecting all key spaces.

Tip

Auto-Replicate setting should be enabled via an arm template. The arm template should include:

"properties":{
...
"externalDataCenters": ["dc-name-1","dc-name-2"],
"autoReplicate": "AllKeyspaces",
...
}

Warning

This will change all your keyspaces definition to include WITH REPLICATION = { 'class' : 'NetworkTopologyStrategy', 'on-prem-datacenter-1' : 3, 'mi-datacenter-1': 3 }. If this is not the topology you want, you will need to adjust it and run nodetool rebuild manually on the Cassandra Managed Instance cluster. Learn more about Auto-Replication

  • Update and monitor data replication progress by selecting the Data Center pane

    Screenshot showing replication progress.

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Next steps

In this quickstart, you learned how to create a hybrid cluster using Azure Managed Instance for Apache Cassandra Client Configurator. You can now start working with the cluster.