1.7 KiB
1.7 KiB
Wordpress lab
Spawn a standalone Wordpress instance
- Create a Namespace.
- Deploy the
wordpress:5
image, using adeployment
of one replica and exposing the port80
. - Try to connect to it using port forwarding from the hosting node.
- Confirm the Wordpress setup screen is available and that you need a database to complete the setup.
Create a service to expose Wordpress
- Expose the Wordpress server, with a service to facilite access to it.
Create a MariaDB database
- Deploy the
mariadb:10
image:- Using a
deployment
of one replica - Exposing an environment variable called
MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD
containing the password of your choice - Exposing an environment variable called
MYSQL_DATABASE
with the valuewordpress
(to automatically create an empty database at MariaDB startup) - Exposing the port
3306
.
- Using a
- Create a
service
to expose the MariaDB server. - Resume the Wordpress setup to use the newly created database.
- Delete the mariadb container to have it recreated.
- Go back to Wordpress and note that all previous work is now lost.
Put Wordpress database settings into environment variables
- Edit the wordpress deployment and add the following environment variables with appropriate values:
- WORDPRESS_DB_HOST
- WORDPRESS_DB_NAME
- WORDPRESS_DB_USER
- WORDPRESS_DB_PASSWORD
- Confirm the database settings are now automatically configured.
Persist the MariaDB volume
- Create a
PersistentVolumeClaim
to store MariaDB data. - Modify the mariadb deployment to mount the new PersistentVolume into
/var/lib/mysql
- Repeat the Wordpress setup
- Delete the mariadb container and confirm the Wordpress configuration is restored from the database.