title | summary | category |
---|---|---|
Install and Deploy TiKV Using Docker |
Use Docker to deploy a TiKV cluster on multiple nodes. |
operations |
This guide describes how to deploy a multi-node TiKV cluster using Docker.
Warning: Do not use Docker to deploy the TiKV cluster in the production environment. For production, use Ansible to deploy the TiKV cluster.
Make sure that Docker is installed on each machine.
For more details about prerequisites, see Hardware and Software Requirements.
Assume that you have 6 machines with the following details:
Name | Host IP | Services | Data Path |
---|---|---|---|
Node1 | 192.168.1.101 | PD1 | /data |
Node2 | 192.168.1.102 | PD2 | /data |
Node3 | 192.168.1.103 | PD3 | /data |
Node4 | 192.168.1.104 | TiKV1 | /data |
Node5 | 192.168.1.105 | TiKV2 | /data |
Node6 | 192.168.1.106 | TiKV3 | /data |
If you want to test TiKV with a limited number of nodes, you can also use one PD instance to test the entire cluster.
Start Docker and pull the latest images of TiKV and PD from Docker Hub using the following command:
docker pull pingcap/tikv:latest
docker pull pingcap/pd:latest
Log in to the three PD machines and start PD respectively:
-
Start PD1 on Node1:
docker run -d --name pd1 \ -p 2379:2379 \ -p 2380:2380 \ -v /etc/localtime:/etc/localtime:ro \ -v /data:/data \ pingcap/pd:latest \ --name="pd1" \ --data-dir="/data/pd1" \ --client-urls="http://0.0.0.0:2379" \ --advertise-client-urls="http://192.168.1.101:2379" \ --peer-urls="http://0.0.0.0:2380" \ --advertise-peer-urls="http://192.168.1.101:2380" \ --initial-cluster="pd1=http://192.168.1.101:2380,pd2=http://192.168.1.102:2380,pd3=http://192.168.1.103:2380"
-
Start PD2 on Node2:
docker run -d --name pd2 \ -p 2379:2379 \ -p 2380:2380 \ -v /etc/localtime:/etc/localtime:ro \ -v /data:/data \ pingcap/pd:latest \ --name="pd2" \ --data-dir="/data/pd2" \ --client-urls="http://0.0.0.0:2379" \ --advertise-client-urls="http://192.168.1.102:2379" \ --peer-urls="http://0.0.0.0:2380" \ --advertise-peer-urls="http://192.168.1.102:2380" \ --initial-cluster="pd1=http://192.168.1.101:2380,pd2=http://192.168.1.102:2380,pd3=http://192.168.1.103:2380"
-
Start PD3 on Node3:
docker run -d --name pd3 \ -p 2379:2379 \ -p 2380:2380 \ -v /etc/localtime:/etc/localtime:ro \ -v /data:/data \ pingcap/pd:latest \ --name="pd3" \ --data-dir="/data/pd3" \ --client-urls="http://0.0.0.0:2379" \ --advertise-client-urls="http://192.168.1.103:2379" \ --peer-urls="http://0.0.0.0:2380" \ --advertise-peer-urls="http://192.168.1.103:2380" \ --initial-cluster="pd1=http://192.168.1.101:2380,pd2=http://192.168.1.102:2380,pd3=http://192.168.1.103:2380"
Log in to the three TiKV machines and start TiKV respectively:
-
Start TiKV1 on Node4:
docker run -d --name tikv1 \ -p 20160:20160 \ -v /etc/localtime:/etc/localtime:ro \ -v /data:/data \ pingcap/tikv:latest \ --addr="0.0.0.0:20160" \ --advertise-addr="192.168.1.104:20160" \ --data-dir="/data/tikv1" \ --pd="192.168.1.101:2379,192.168.1.102:2379,192.168.1.103:2379"
-
Start TiKV2 on Node5:
docker run -d --name tikv2 \ -p 20160:20160 \ -v /etc/localtime:/etc/localtime:ro \ -v /data:/data \ pingcap/tikv:latest \ --addr="0.0.0.0:20160" \ --advertise-addr="192.168.1.105:20160" \ --data-dir="/data/tikv2" \ --pd="192.168.1.101:2379,192.168.1.102:2379,192.168.1.103:2379"
-
Start TiKV3 on Node6:
docker run -d --name tikv3 \ -p 20160:20160 \ -v /etc/localtime:/etc/localtime:ro \ -v /data:/data \ pingcap/tikv:latest \ --addr="0.0.0.0:20160" \ --advertise-addr="192.168.1.106:20160" \ --data-dir="/data/tikv3" \ --pd="192.168.1.101:2379,192.168.1.102:2379,192.168.1.103:2379"
You can check whether the TiKV cluster has been successfully deployed using the following command:
curl 192.168.1.101:2379/pd/api/v1/stores
If the state of all the TiKV instances is "Up", you have successfully deployed a TiKV cluster.
If you want to try the Go client, see Try Two Types of APIs.