TPA installation v23

To use TPA, you need to install from packages or source and run the tpaexec setup command. If you have an EDB subscription plan, and therefore have access to the EDB repositories, follow these instructions to install TPA packages.

To install TPA from source, see Installing from source.

See Distribution support for information about the platforms that are supported.

Info

Make absolutely sure that your system has the correct date and time set. Various operations will fail otherwise. We recommend you use a network time, for example, sudo ntpdate pool.ntp.org.

Quick start

To obtain your token, log in to EDB Repos 2.0. Then execute the following command, substituting your token for <your-token>. Replace <your-plan> with one of the following according to the EDB plan you're subscribed to: enterprise, standard, community360, or postgres_distributed.

Add repository and install TPA on Debian or Ubuntu

curl -1sLf 'https://downloads.enterprisedb.com/<your-token>/<your-plan>/setup.deb.sh' | sudo -E bash
sudo apt-get install tpaexec

Add repository and install TPA on RHEL, Rocky, AlmaLinux, or Oracle Linux

curl -1sLf 'https://downloads.enterprisedb.com/<your-token>/<your-plan>/setup.rpm.sh' | sudo -E bash
sudo yum install tpaexec

Install additional dependencies

sudo /opt/EDB/TPA/bin/tpaexec setup

Verify installation (run as a normal user)

/opt/EDB/TPA/bin/tpaexec selftest

More detailed explanations of each step follow.

Where to install TPA

As long as you're using a supported platform, you can install and run TPA from your workstation. This approach is fine for learning, local testing, or demonstration purposes. if you want to perform a complete deployment on your own workstation, TPA supports deploying to Docker containers.

For production use, we recommend running TPA on a dedicated persistent virtual machine. We recommend this because it ensures that the cluster directories are retained and available to your team for future cluster management or update. It also means you have to update only one copy of TPA and you need to provide network access only from a single TPA host to the target instances.

Installing TPA packages

To install TPA, you must first subscribe to an EDB repository that provides it. The preferred source for repositories is EDB Repos 2.0.

To obtain your token, log in to EDB Repos 2.0. Then execute the following command, substituting your token for <your-token>. Replace <your-plan> with one of the following according to the EDB plan you're subscribed to: enterprise, standard, community360, or postgres_distributed.

Add repository on Debian or Ubuntu

curl -1sLf 'https://downloads.enterprisedb.com/<your-token>/<your-plan>/setup.deb.sh' | sudo -E bash

Add repository on RHEL, Rocky, AlmaLinux or Oracle Linux

curl -1sLf 'https://downloads.enterprisedb.com/<your-token>/<your-plan>/setup.rpm.sh' | sudo -E bash

Alternatively, you can obtain TPA from the legacy 2ndQuadrant repository. To do so, log in to the EDB Customer Support Portal and subscribe to the products/tpa/release repository by adding a subscription under Support/Software/Subscriptions. Then follow the instructions to enable the repository on your system.

Once you have enabled one of these repositories, you can install TPA as follows.

Install on Debian or Ubuntu

sudo apt-get install tpaexec

Install on RHEL, Rocky, AlmaLinux, or Oracle Linux

sudo yum install tpaexec

This command installs TPA into /opt/EDB/TPA. It also ensures that other required packages (such as Python 3.9 or later) are installed.

We mention sudo here only to indicate the commands that need root privileges. You can use any other means to run the commands as root.

Setting up the TPA Python environment

Next, run tpaexec setup to create an isolated Python environment and install the correct versions of all required modules.

Note

On Ubuntu versions prior to 20.04, use sudo -H tpaexec setup to avoid subsequent permission errors during tpaexec configure.

sudo /opt/EDB/TPA/bin/tpaexec setup

You must run this command as root because it writes to /opt/EDB/TPA, but the process doesn't affect any system-wide Python modules you have installed (including Ansible).

Add /opt/EDB/TPA/bin to the PATH of the user who normally runs tpaexec commands. For example, you can add this to your .bashrc or equivalent shell configuration file:

export PATH=$PATH:/opt/EDB/TPA/bin

Installing TPA without internet or network access (air-gapped)

You can install TPA onto a server that can't access either the EDB repositories, a Python package index, or both. For information on how to use TPA in such an environment, see Managing clusters in a disconnected or air-gapped environment.

Downloading TPA packages

If you can't access the EDB repositories directly from the server on which you need to install TPA, you can download the packages from an internet-connected machine and transfer them. There are several ways to achieve this.

If your internet-connected machine uses the same operating system as the target, we recommend using yumdownloader (RHEL-like) or apt download (Debian-like) to download the packages.

If this approach isn't possible, contact EDB Support, which can provide you with a download link or instructions appropriate to your subscription.

Installing without access to a Python package index

When you run tpaexec setup, it ordinarily downloads the Python packages from a Python package index. Unless your environment provides a different index, the default is the official PyPI. If no package index is available, install the tpaexec-deps package in the same way you installed tpaexec. The tpaexec-deps package (available from the same repository as tpaexec) bundles everything that you would have downloaded, so that they can be installed without network access. Install the package before you run tpaexec setup, and the bundled copies are used automatically.

Verifying your TPA installation

After completing the installation, verify your local installation:

tpaexec selftest

If this command completes without any errors, your TPA installation is ready for use.

Upgrading TPA

To upgrade to a later release of TPA, you must:

  1. Install the latest tpaexec package.
  2. Install the latest tpaexec-deps package (if required; see Installing without access to a Python package index).
  3. Run tpaexec setup again.

If you subscribed to the TPA package repository, running apt-get update && apt-get upgrade or yum update installs the latest available versions of these packages. If not, you can install the packages by any means available.

We recommend that you run tpaexec setup again whenever a new version of tpaexec is installed. Some new releases might not strictly require this, but others can't work without it.

Ansible versions

TPA uses Ansible version 8 by default (ansible-core 2.15).

TPA has experimental support for Ansible 9 (ansible-core 2.16), which can be specified using the --ansible-version argument to tpaexec setup. It requires Python 3.10 or greater, so if you have edb-python 3.9 installed, you must explicitly set your python version when running tpaexec setup:

PYTHON=/usr/bin/python3.10 tpaexec setup --ansible-version 9