garage/doc/book/working-documents/migration-1.md
2024-04-10 17:47:34 +02:00

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+++ title = "Migrating from 0.9 to 1.0" weight = 11 +++

This guide explains how to migrate to 1.0 if you have an existing 0.9 cluster. We don't recommend trying to migrate to 1.0 directly from 0.8 or older.

This migration procedure has been tested on several clusters without issues. However, it is still a critical procedure that might cause issues. Make sure to back up all your data before attempting it!

You might also want to read our general documentation on upgrading Garage.

Changes introduced in v1.0

The following are breaking changes in Garage v1.0 that require your attention when migrating:

  • The Sled metadata db engine has been removed. If your cluster was still using Sled, you will need to use a Garage v0.9.x binary to convert the database using the garage convert-db subcommand. See here for the details of the procedure.

The following syntax changes have been made to the configuration file:

  • The replication_mode parameter has been split into two parameters: replication_factor and consistency_mode. The old syntax using replication_mode is still supported for legacy reasons and can still be used.

  • The parameters sled_cache_capacity and sled_flush_every_ms have been removed.

Migration procedure

The migration to Garage v1.0 can be done with almost no downtime, by restarting all nodes at once in the new version.

The migration steps are as follows:

  1. Do a garage repair --all-nodes --yes tables, check the logs and check that all data seems to be synced correctly between nodes. If you have time, do additional garage repair procedures (blocks, versions, block_refs, etc.)

  2. Ensure you have a snapshot of your Garage installation that you can restore to in case the upgrade goes wrong:

    • If you are running Garage v0.9.4 or later, use the garage meta snapshot --all to make a backup snapshot of the metadata directories of your nodes for backup purposes, and save a copy of the following files in the metadata directories of your nodes: cluster_layout, data_layout, node_key, node_key.pub.

    • If you are running a filesystem such as ZFS or BTRFS that support snapshotting, you can create a filesystem-level snapshot to be used as a restoration point if needed.

    • In other cases, make a backup using the old procedure: turn off each node individually; back up its metadata folder (for instance, use the following command if your metadata directory is /var/lib/garage/meta: cd /var/lib/garage ; tar -acf meta-v0.9.tar.zst meta/); turn it back on again. This will allow you to take a backup of all nodes without impacting global cluster availability. You can do all nodes of a single zone at once as this does not impact the availability of Garage.

  3. Prepare your updated binaries and configuration files for Garage v1.0

  4. Shut down all v0.9 nodes simultaneously, and restart them all simultaneously in v1.0. Use your favorite deployment tool (Ansible, Kubernetes, Nomad) to achieve this as fast as possible. Garage v1.0 should be in a working state as soon as enough nodes have started.

  5. Monitor your cluster in the following hours to see if it works well under your production load.