pgagroal manual · How-to · upstream 2.1.0
Remote management
From the upstream pgagroal manual, rendered in the Elevarq documentation style. Single-sourced from the pinned pgagroal release.
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Enable remote management
On the pooler machine, you need to enable the remote management. In order to do so,
add the management setting to the main pgagroal.conf configuration file.
The value of setting is the number of a free TCP/IP port to which the remote
management will connect to.
With your editor of choice, edit the /etc/pgagroal/pgagroal.conf file and add the
management option likely the following:
management = 2347
under the [pgagroal] section, so that the configuration file looks like:
[pgagroal]
...
management = 2347
See the pgagroal configuration settings for more details.
Add remote admin user
Remote management is done via a specific admin user, that has to be created within the pooler vault. As the [pgagroal][pgagroal] operating system user, run the following command:
cd /etc/pgagroal
pgagroal-admin -f /etc/pgagroal/pgagroal_admins.conf -U admin -P admin1234 add-user
The above will create the admin username with the admin1234 password.
We strongly encourage you to choose non trivial usernames and passwords!
Restart pgagroal
In order to make the changes available, and therefore activate the remote management, you have to restart [pgagroal][pgagroal], for example by issuing the following commands from the [pgagroal][pgagroal] operatng system user:
pgagroal-cli shutdown
pgagroal -d
Connect via remote administration interface
In order to connect remotely, you need to specify at least the -h and -p flags on the pgagroal-cli command line. Such flags will tell pgagroal-cli to connect to a remote host. You can also specify the username you want to connect with by specifying the -U flag.
So, to get the status of the pool remotely, you can issue:
pgagroal-cli -h localhost -p 2347 -U admin status
and type the password admin1234 when asked for it.
If you don't specify the -U flag on the command line, you will be asked for a username too.
Please note that the above example uses localhost as the remote host, but clearly you can specify any real remote host you want to manage.