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Upgrade an indirectly connected Azure Arc-enabled data controller using Kubernetes tools

This article explains how to upgrade an indirectly connected Azure Arc-enabled data controller with Kubernetes tools.

During a data controller upgrade, portions of the data control plane such as Custom Resource Definitions (CRDs) and containers may be upgraded. An upgrade of the data controller will not cause downtime for the data services (SQL Managed Instance or PostgreSQL server).

In this article, you'll apply a .yaml file to:

  1. Create the service account for running upgrade.
  2. Upgrade the bootstrapper.
  3. Upgrade the data controller.

Note

Some of the data services tiers and modes are generally available and some are in preview. If you install GA and preview services on the same data controller, you can't upgrade in place. To upgrade, delete all non-GA database instances. You can find the list of generally available and preview services in the Release Notes.

Prerequisites

Prior to beginning the upgrade of the data controller, you'll need:

  • To connect and authenticate to a Kubernetes cluster
  • An existing Kubernetes context selected

You need an indirectly connected data controller with the imageTag: v1.0.0_2021-07-30 or greater.

Install tools

To upgrade the data controller using Kubernetes tools, you need to have the Kubernetes tools installed.

The examples in this article use kubectl, but similar approaches could be used with other Kubernetes tools such as the Kubernetes dashboard, oc, or helm if you're familiar with those tools and Kubernetes yaml/json.

Install the kubectl tool

View available images and chose a version

Pull the list of available images for the data controller with the following command:

az arcdata dc list-upgrades --k8s-namespace <namespace>

The command above returns output like the following example:

Found 2 valid versions.  The current datacontroller version is <current-version>.
<available-version>
...

Upgrade data controller

This section shows how to upgrade an indirectly connected data controller.

Note

Some of the data services tiers and modes are generally available and some are in preview. If you install GA and preview services on the same data controller, you can't upgrade in place. To upgrade, delete all non-GA database instances. You can find the list of generally available and preview services in the Release Notes.

For supported upgrade paths, see Upgrade Azure Arc-enabled data services.

Upgrade

You'll need to connect and authenticate to a Kubernetes cluster and have an existing Kubernetes context selected prior to beginning the upgrade of the data controller.

Create the service account for running upgrade

Important

Requires Kubernetes permissions for creating service account, role binding, cluster role, cluster role binding, and all the RBAC permissions being granted to the service account.

Save a copy of arcdata-deployer.yaml, and replace the placeholder {{NAMESPACE}} in the file with the namespace of the data controller, for example: arc. Run the following command to create the deployer service account with the edited file.

kubectl apply --namespace arc -f arcdata-deployer.yaml

Upgrade the bootstrapper

The following command creates a job for upgrading the bootstrapper and related Kubernetes objects.

Important

The yaml file in the following command defaults to mcr.microsoft.com/arcdata. Please save a copy of the yaml file and update it to a use a different registry/repository if necessary.

kubectl apply --namespace arc -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/microsoft/azure_arc/main/arc_data_services/upgrade/yaml/bootstrapper-upgrade-job.yaml

Upgrade the data controller

The following command patches the image tag to upgrade the data controller.

kubectl apply --namespace arc -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/microsoft/azure_arc/main/arc_data_services/upgrade/yaml/data-controller-upgrade.yaml

Monitor the upgrade status

You can monitor the progress of the upgrade with kubectl.

kubectl

kubectl get datacontrollers --namespace <namespace> -w
kubectl get monitors --namespace <namespace> -w

The upgrade is a two-part process. First the controller is upgraded, then the monitoring stack is upgraded. During the upgrade, use kubectl get monitors -n <namespace> -w to view the status. The output will be:

NAME           STATUS     AGE
monitorstack   Updating   36m
monitorstack   Updating   36m
monitorstack   Updating   39m
monitorstack   Updating   39m
monitorstack   Updating   41m
monitorstack   Ready      41m

Troubleshooting

When the desired version is set to a specific version, the bootstrapper job will attempt to upgrade to that version until it succeeds. If the upgrade is successful, the RunningVersion property of the spec is updated to the new version. Upgrades could fail for scenarios such as an incorrect image tag, unable to connect to registry or repository, insufficient CPU or memory allocated to the containers, or insufficient storage.

  1. Run the below command to see if any of the pods show an Error status or have high number of restarts:

    kubectl get pods --namespace <namespace>
    
  2. To look at Events to see if there is an error, run

    kubectl describe pod <pod name> --namespace <namespace>
    
  3. To get a list of the containers in the pods, run

    kubectl get pods <pod name> --namespace <namespace> -o jsonpath='{.spec.containers[*].name}*'
    
  4. To get the logs for a container, run

    kubectl logs <pod name> <container name> --namespace <namespace>
    

To view common errors and how to troubleshoot them go to Troubleshooting resources.