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Dgraph Administration

Each Dgraph Alpha exposes various administrative (admin) endpoints both over HTTP and GraphQL, for example endpoints to export data and to perform a clean shutdown. All such admin endpoints are protected by three layers of authentication:

  1. IP White-listing (use the --security superflag’s whitelist option on Dgraph Alpha to whitelist IP addresses other than localhost).
  2. Poor-man’s auth, if Dgraph Alpha is started with the --security superflag’s token option, then you should pass the token as an X-Dgraph-AuthToken header while making the HTTP request.
  3. Guardian-only access, if ACL is enabled. In this case you should pass the ACL-JWT of a Guardian user using the X-Dgraph-AccessToken header while making the HTTP request.

An admin endpoint is any HTTP endpoint which provides admin functionality. Admin endpoints usually start with the /admin path. The current list of admin endpoints includes the following:

  • /admin
  • /admin/backup
  • /admin/config/cache_mb
  • /admin/draining
  • /admin/export
  • /admin/shutdown
  • /admin/schema
  • /admin/schema/validate
  • /alter
  • /login

There are a few exceptions to the general rule described above:

  • /login: This endpoint logs-in an ACL user, and provides them with a JWT. Only IP Whitelisting and Poor-man’s auth checks are performed for this endpoint.
  • /admin: This endpoint provides GraphQL queries/mutations corresponding to the HTTP admin endpoints. All of the queries/mutations on /admin have all three layers of authentication, except for login (mutation), which has the same behavior as the above HTTP /login endpoint.

Whitelisting Admin Operations

By default, admin operations can only be initiated from the machine on which the Dgraph Alpha runs.

You can use the --security superflag’s whitelist option to specify a comma-separated whitelist of IP addresses, IP ranges, CIDR ranges, or hostnames for hosts from which admin operations can be initiated.

IP Address

dgraph alpha --security whitelist=127.0.0.1 ...

This would allow admin operations from hosts with IP 127.0.0.1 (i.e., localhost only).

IP Range

dgraph alpha --security whitelist=172.17.0.0:172.20.0.0,192.168.1.1 ...

This would allow admin operations from hosts with IP between 172.17.0.0 and 172.20.0.0 along with the server which has IP address as 192.168.1.1.

CIDR Range

dgraph alpha --security whitelist=172.17.0.0/16,172.18.0.0/15,172.20.0.0/32,192.168.1.1/32 ...

This would allow admin operations from hosts that matches the CIDR range 172.17.0.0/16, 172.18.0.0/15, 172.20.0.0/32, or 192.168.1.1/32 (the same range as the IP Range example).

You can set whitelist IP to 0.0.0.0/0 to whitelist all IP addresses.

Hostname

dgraph alpha --security whitelist=admin-bastion,host.docker.internal ...

This would allow admin operations from hosts with hostnames admin-bastion and host.docker.internal.

Restrict Mutation Operations

By default, you can perform mutation operations for any predicate. If the predicate in mutation doesn’t exist in the schema, the predicate gets added to the schema with an appropriate Dgraph Type.

You can use --limit "mutations=disallow" to disable all mutations, which is set to allow by default.

dgraph alpha --limit "mutations=disallow;"

Enforce a strict schema by setting --limit "mutations=strict. This mode allows mutations only on predicates already in the schema. Before performing a mutation on a predicate that doesn’t exist in the schema, you need to perform an alter operation with that predicate and its schema type.

dgraph alpha --limit "mutation=strict; mutations-nquad=1000000"

Secure Alter Operations

Clients can use alter operations to apply schema updates and drop particular or all predicates from the database. By default, all clients are allowed to perform alter operations. You can configure Dgraph to only allow alter operations when the client provides a specific token. You can use this “Simple ACL” token to prevent clients from making unintended or accidental schema updates or predicate drops.

You can specify the auth token with the --security superflag’s token option for each Dgraph Alpha in the cluster. Clients must include the same auth token to make alter requests.

$ dgraph alpha --security token=<authtokenstring>
$ curl -s localhost:8080/alter -d '{ "drop_all": true }'
# Permission denied. No token provided.
$ curl -s -H 'X-Dgraph-AuthToken: <wrongsecret>' localhost:8080/alter -d '{ "drop_all": true }'
# Permission denied. Incorrect token.
$ curl -H 'X-Dgraph-AuthToken: <authtokenstring>' localhost:8080/alter -d '{ "drop_all": true }'
# Success. Token matches.
Note To fully secure alter operations in the cluster, the authentication token must be set for every Alpha node.

Export database

As an Administrator you might want to export data from Dgraph to:

  • backup your data
  • move the data from Dgraph Cloud instance to another Dgraph instance, or Dgraph Cloud instance
  • share your data

For more information about exporting your database, see Export data

Shut down database

A clean exit of a single Dgraph node is initiated by running the following GraphQL mutation on /admin endpoint.

Warning This won’t work if called from outside the server where Dgraph is running. You can specify a list or range of whitelisted IP addresses from which shutdown or other admin operations can be initiated using the --security superflag’s whitelist option on dgraph alpha.
mutation {
  shutdown {
    response {
      message
      code
    }
  }
}

This stops the Alpha on which the command is executed and not the entire cluster.

Delete database

To drop all data, you could send a DropAll request via /alter endpoint.

Alternatively, you could:

  • Shutdown Dgraph and wait for all writes to complete,
  • Delete (maybe do an export first) the p and w directories, then
  • Restart Dgraph.

Upgrade database

Doing periodic exports is always a good idea. This is particularly useful if you wish to upgrade Dgraph or reconfigure the sharding of a cluster. The following are the right steps to safely export and restart.

  1. Start an export
  2. Ensure it is successful
  3. Shutdown Dgraph and wait for all writes to complete
  4. Start a new Dgraph cluster using new data directories (this can be done by passing empty directories to the options -p and -w for Alphas and -w for Zeros)
  5. Reload the data via bulk loader
  6. Verify the correctness of the new Dgraph cluster. If all looks good, you can delete the old directories (export serves as an insurance)

These steps are necessary because Dgraph’s underlying data format could have changed, and reloading the export avoids encoding incompatibilities.

Blue-green deployment is a common approach to minimize downtime during the upgrade process. This approach involves switching your application to read-only mode. To make sure that no mutations are executed during the maintenance window you can do a rolling restart of all your Alpha using the option --mutations disallow when you restart the Alpha nodes. This will ensure the cluster is in read-only mode.

At this point your application can still read from the old cluster and you can perform the steps 4. and 5. described above. When the new cluster (that uses the upgraded version of Dgraph) is up and running, you can point your application to it, and shutdown the old cluster.

Upgrade from v1.2.2 to v20.03.0 for Enterprise customers

  1. Use binary backup to export data from old cluster
  2. Ensure it is successful
  3. Shutdown Dgraph and wait for all writes to complete
  4. Upgrade dgraph binary to v20.03.0
  5. Restore from the backups using upgraded dgraph binary
  6. Start a new Dgraph cluster using the restored data directories
  7. Upgrade ACL data using the following command:
dgraph upgrade --acl -a localhost:9080 -u groot -p password

Upgrade from v20.03.0 to v20.07.0 for Enterprise customers

  1. Use binary backup to export data from old cluster

  2. Ensure it is successful

  3. Shutdown Dgraph and wait for all writes to complete

  4. Upgrade dgraph binary to v20.07.0

  5. Restore from the backups using upgraded dgraph binary

  6. Start a new Dgraph cluster using the restored data directories

  7. Upgrade ACL data using the following command:

    dgraph upgrade --acl -a localhost:9080 -u groot -p password -f v20.03.0 -t v20.07.0
    

    This is required because previously the type-names User, Group and Rule were used by ACL. They have now been renamed as dgraph.type.User, dgraph.type.Group and dgraph.type.Rule, to keep them in Dgraph’s internal namespace. This upgrade just changes the type-names for the ACL nodes to the new type-names.

    You can use --dry-run option in dgraph upgrade command to see a dry run of what the upgrade command will do.

  8. If you have types or predicates in your schema whose names start with dgraph., then you would need to manually alter schema to change their names to something else which isn’t prefixed with dgraph., and also do mutations to change the value of dgraph.type edge to the new type name and copy data from old predicate name to new predicate name for all the nodes which are affected. Then, you can drop the old types and predicates from DB.

Upgrade from v20.11.0 to v21.03.0 for Enterprise customers

  1. Use binary backup to export data from the old cluster

  2. Ensure it is successful

  3. Shutdown Dgraph and wait for all writes to complete

  4. Upgrade dgraph binary to v21.03.0

  5. Restore from the backups using the upgraded dgraph binary

  6. Start a new Dgraph cluster using the restored data directories

  7. Upgrade the CORS and persisted queries. To upgrade an ACL cluster use:

    dgraph upgrade --from v20.11.0 --to v21.03.0 --user groot --password password --alpha http://localhost:9080 --alpha-http http://localhost:8080 --deleteOld
    

    To upgrade a non-ACL cluster use:

    dgraph upgrade --from v20.11.0 --to v21.03.0 --alpha http://localhost:9080 --alpha-http http://localhost:8080 --deleteOld
    

    This is required because previously CORS information was stored in dgraph.cors predicate which has now been moved to be a part of the GraphQL schema. Also, the format of persisted queries has changed. Some of the internal deprecated predicates will be removed by this change.

    You can use --dry-run option in dgraph upgrade command to see a dry run of what the upgrade command will do.

Note The above steps are valid for migration from a cluster in v20.11 to a single-tenant cluster in v21.03, as backup and restore are cluster-wide operations and a single namespace cannot be restored in a multi-tenant cluster.

Post Installation

Now that Dgraph is up and running, to understand how to add and query data to Dgraph, follow Query Language Spec. Also, have a look at Frequently asked questions.