google-cloud-sql.md 5.6 KB


title: "Ingest data from Google Cloud SQL" description: "How to stream data from Google Cloud SQL for MySQL to Materialize" menu: main:

parent: "mysql"
name: "Google Cloud SQL"
identifier: "mysql-google-cloudsql"

This page shows you how to stream data from Google Cloud SQL for MySQL to Materialize using theMySQL source.

{{< tip >}} {{< guided-tour-blurb-for-ingest-data >}} {{< /tip >}}

Before you begin

{{% mysql-direct/before-you-begin %}}

A. Configure Google Cloud SQL

1. Enable GTID-based binlog replication

Before creating a source in Materialize, you must configure Google Cloud SQL for MySQL for GTID-based binlog replication. This requires the following configuration changes:

Configuration parameter Value Details
log_bin ON
binlog_format ROW This configuration is deprecated as of MySQL 8.0.34. Newer versions of MySQL default to row-based logging.
binlog_row_image FULL
gtid_mode ON
enforce_gtid_consistency ON
replica_preserve_commit_order ON Only required when connecting Materialize to a read-replica for replication, rather than the primary server.

For guidance on enabling GTID-based binlog replication in Cloud SQL, see the Cloud SQL documentation.

2. Create a user for replication

{{% mysql-direct/create-a-user-for-replication %}}

B. (Optional) Configure network security

{{< note >}} If you are prototyping and your Google Cloud SQL instance is publicly accessible, you can skip this step. For production scenarios, we recommend configuring one of the network security options below. {{< /note >}}

There are various ways to configure your database's network to allow Materialize to connect:

  • Allow Materialize IPs: If your database is publicly accessible, you can configure your database's firewall to allow connections from a set of static Materialize IP addresses.

  • Use an SSH tunnel: If your database is running in a private network, you can use an SSH tunnel to connect Materialize to the database.

Select the option that works best for you.

{{< tabs >}}

{{< tab "Allow Materialize IPs">}}

  1. In the SQL Shell, or your preferred SQL client connected to Materialize, find the static egress IP addresses for the Materialize region you are running in:

    SELECT * FROM mz_egress_ips;
    
  2. Update your Google Cloud SQL firewall rules to allow traffic from each IP address from the previous step.

{{< /tab >}}

{{< tab "Use an SSH tunnel">}}

To create an SSH tunnel from Materialize to your database, you launch an instance to serve as an SSH bastion host, configure the bastion host to allow traffic only from Materialize, and then configure your database's private network to allow traffic from the bastion host.

  1. Launch a GCE instance to serve as your SSH bastion host.

    • Make sure the instance is publicly accessible and in the same VPC as your database.
    • Add a key pair and note the username. You'll use this username when connecting Materialize to your bastion host.
    • Make sure the VM has a static public IP address. You'll use this IP address when connecting Materialize to your bastion host.
  2. Configure the SSH bastion host to allow traffic only from Materialize.

    1. In the SQL Shell, or your preferred SQL client connected to Materialize, get the static egress IP addresses for the Materialize region you are running in:

      SELECT * FROM mz_egress_ips;
      
    2. Update your SSH bastion host's firewall rules to allow traffic from each IP address from the previous step.

  3. Update your Google Cloud SQL firewall rules to allow traffic from the SSH bastion host.

{{< /tab >}}

{{< /tabs >}}

C. Ingest data in Materialize

1. (Optional) Create a cluster

{{< note >}} If you are prototyping and already have a cluster to host your MySQL source (e.g. quickstart), you can skip this step. For production scenarios, we recommend separating your workloads into multiple clusters for resource isolation. {{< /note >}}

{{% mysql-direct/create-a-cluster %}}

2. Start ingesting data

[//]: # "TODO(morsapaes) MySQL connections support multiple SSL modes. We should adapt to that, rather than just state SSL MODE REQUIRED."

Now that you've configured your database network, you can connect Materialize to your MySQL database and start ingesting data. The exact steps depend on your networking configuration, so start by selecting the relevant option.

{{< tabs >}}

{{< tab "Allow Materialize IPs">}} {{% mysql-direct/ingesting-data/allow-materialize-ips %}} {{< /tab >}}

{{< tab "Use an SSH tunnel">}} {{% mysql-direct/ingesting-data/use-ssh-tunnel %}} {{< /tab >}}

{{< /tabs >}}

3. Monitor the ingestion status

{{% mysql-direct/check-the-ingestion-status %}}

4. Right-size the cluster

{{% mysql-direct/right-size-the-cluster %}}

D. Explore your data

{{% mysql-direct/next-steps %}}

Considerations

{{% include-md file="shared-content/mysql-considerations.md" %}}