Overview
Types of upgrades
- Major-version upgrades: A , such as from v24.2 to v24.3, may include new features, updates to cluster setting defaults, and backward-incompatible changes. Performing a major-version upgrade requires an additional step to finalize the upgrade. As of 2024, every second major version is an . Innovation releases offer shorter support windows and can be skipped.
- Patch upgrades: A moves a cluster from one patch release to another within a major version, such as from v24.2.3 to v24.2.4. Patch upgrades do not introduce backward-incompatible changes. A major version of CockroachDB has two phases of patch releases: a series of testing releases (beta, alpha, and RC releases) followed by a series of production releases (vX.Y.0, vX.Y.1, and so on). A major version’s first production release (the.0 release) is also known as its GA release.
Compatible versions
A cluster may always be upgraded to the next major release. Every second major version is an Innovation release that can be deployed or skipped:-
If your cluster is running a major version that is a Regular release, it can be upgraded to either:
- the next major version (an Innovation release)
- the release that follows the next major version (the next Regular release, once it is available, skipping the Innovation release).
-
If a cluster is running a major version that is labeled an Innovation release, it can be upgraded only to the next Regular release.
Before you begin
All
kubectl steps should be performed in the . By default, this is cockroach-operator-system.- Verify the overall health of your cluster using the :
- Under Node Status, make sure all nodes that should be live are listed as such. If any nodes are unexpectedly listed as
SUSPECTorDEAD, identify why the nodes are offline and either restart them or them before beginning your upgrade. If there areDEADand non-decommissioned nodes in your cluster, the upgrade cannot be finalized. If any node is not fully decommissioned, try the following:- First, reissue the . The second command typically succeeds within a few minutes.
- If the second decommission command does not succeed, and then decommission it again. Before continuing the upgrade, the node must be marked as
decommissioned.
- Under Replication Status, make sure there are
0under-replicated and unavailable ranges. Otherwise, performing a rolling upgrade increases the risk that ranges will lose a majority of their replicas and cause cluster unavailability. Therefore, it’s important to identify and resolve the cause of range under-replication and/or unavailability before beginning your upgrade. - In the Node List, make sure all nodes are on the same version. Upgrade them to the cluster’s current version before continuing. If any nodes are behind, this also indicates that the previous major-version upgrade may not be finalized.
- In the Metrics dashboards, make sure , , and capacity are within acceptable values for each node. Nodes must be able to tolerate some increase in case the new version uses more resources for your workload. If any of these metrics is above healthy limits, consider to your cluster before beginning your upgrade.
- Under Node Status, make sure all nodes that should be live are listed as such. If any nodes are unexpectedly listed as
- Make sure your cluster is behind a , or your clients are configured to talk to multiple nodes. If your application communicates with only a single node, stopping that node to upgrade its CockroachDB binary will cause your application to fail.
- By default, the uses a compaction concurrency of 3. If you have sufficient IOPS and CPU headroom, you can consider increasing this setting via the
COCKROACH_COMPACTION_CONCURRENCYenvironment variable. This may help to reshape the LSM more quickly in scenarios; and it can lead to increased overall performance for some workloads. Cockroach Labs strongly recommends testing your workload against non-default values of this setting. - CockroachDB is designed with high fault tolerance. However, taking regular backups of your data is an operational best practice for planning. Refer to .
- Review the , as well as the release notes for any skipped major version. Pay careful attention to the sections for backward-incompatible changes, deprecations, changes to default cluster settings, and features that are not available until the upgrade is finalized.
- Optionally disable auto-finalization to preserve the ability to roll back a major-version upgrade instead of finalizing it. If auto-finalization is disabled, a major-version upgrade is not complete until it is finalized.
Ensure you have a valid license key
To perform major version upgrades, you must have . Patch version upgrades can be performed without a valid license key, with the following limitations:- The cluster will run without limitations for a specified grace period. During that time, alerts are displayed that the cluster needs a valid license key. For more information, refer to the .
- The cluster is at the end of the grace period if no before then.
- The cluster will run without limitations for a 7-day grace period. During that time, alerts are displayed that the cluster needs to send telemetry.
- The cluster is if telemetry is not received before the end of the grace period.
Perform a patch upgrade
To upgrade from one patch release to another within the same major version, perform the following steps on one node at a time:-
Change the container image in the custom resource:
-
Apply the new settings to the cluster:
The Operator will perform the staged update.
-
To check the status of the rolling upgrade, run
kubectl get pods. -
Verify that all pods have been upgraded:
You can also check the CockroachDB version of each node in the .
Roll back a patch upgrade
To roll back a patch upgrade, repeat the steps in Perform a patch upgrade, but configure the container image for the pods to the previous major version.Perform a major-version upgrade
To perform a major upgrade:-
Change the container image image in the custom resource:
-
Apply the new settings to the cluster:
The Operator will perform the staged update.
-
To check the status of the rolling upgrade, run
kubectl get pods. -
Verify that all pods have been upgraded:
You can also check the CockroachDB version of each node in the .
-
Before beginning a major-version upgrade, the Operator disables auto-finalization by setting the cluster setting
cluster.preserve_downgrade_optionto the cluster’s current major version. Before finalizing an upgrade, follow your organization’s testing procedures to decide whether to finalize or roll back the upgrade. After finalization begins, you can no longer roll back to the cluster’s previous major version.
Finalize a major-version upgrade manually
To finalize a major-version upgrade:-
Connect to the cluster using the SQL shell:
-
Run the following command:
A series of migration jobs runs to enable certain types of features and changes in the new major version that cannot be rolled back. These include changes to system schemas, indexes, and descriptors, and enabling certain types of improvements and new features. Until the upgrade is finalized, these features and functions will not be available and the command
SHOW CLUSTER SETTING versionwill return the previous version`. You can monitor the process of the migration in the DB Console . Migration jobs have names in the format26.1-{migration-id}. If a migration job fails or stalls, Cockroach Labs can use the migration ID to help diagnose and troubleshoot the problem. Each major version has different migration jobs with different IDs. The amount of time required for finalization depends on the amount of data in the cluster, because finalization runs various internal maintenance and migration tasks. During this time, the cluster will experience a small amount of additional load. When all migration jobs have completed, the upgrade is complete. -
To confirm that finalization has completed, check the cluster version:
If the cluster continues to report that it is on the previous version, finalization has not completed. If auto-finalization is enabled but finalization has not completed, check for the existence of where decommission has stalled. In most cases, issuing the
decommissioncommand again resolves the issue. If you have trouble upgrading, contact Support.
Roll back a major-version upgrade
To roll back to the previous major version before an upgrade is finalized:-
Change the container image in the custom resource to use the previous major version:
-
Apply the new settings to the cluster:
The Operator will perform the staged rollback.
-
To check the status of the rollback, run
kubectl get pods. -
Verify that all pods have been rolled back:
Disable auto-finalization
For clusters managed by the Public operator, auto-finalization is disabled and cannot be enabled. A major version upgrade is not complete until it is manually finalized. The Public operator does not support thecluster.auto_upgrade.enabled.
Before you begin
If you , substitutekubectl with oc in the following commands.
All kubectl steps should be performed in the . By default, this is cockroach-operator-system.
Before beginning a major-version or patch upgrade:
- Verify the overall health of your cluster using the :
- Under Node Status, make sure all nodes that should be live are listed as such. If any nodes are unexpectedly listed as
SUSPECTorDEAD, identify why the nodes are offline and either restart them or them before beginning your upgrade. If there areDEADand non-decommissioned nodes in your cluster, the upgrade cannot be finalized. If any node is not fully decommissioned, try the following:- First, reissue the . The second command typically succeeds within a few minutes.
- If the second decommission command does not succeed, and then decommission it again. Before continuing the upgrade, the node must be marked as
decommissioned.
- Under Replication Status, make sure there are
0under-replicated and unavailable ranges. Otherwise, performing a rolling upgrade increases the risk that ranges will lose a majority of their replicas and cause cluster unavailability. Therefore, it’s important to identify and resolve the cause of range under-replication and/or unavailability before beginning your upgrade. - In the Node List, make sure all nodes are on the same version. Upgrade them to the cluster’s current version before continuing. If any nodes are behind, this also indicates that the previous major-version upgrade may not be finalized.
- In the Metrics dashboards, make sure , , and capacity are within acceptable values for each node. Nodes must be able to tolerate some increase in case the new version uses more resources for your workload. If any of these metrics is above healthy limits, consider to your cluster before beginning your upgrade.
- Under Node Status, make sure all nodes that should be live are listed as such. If any nodes are unexpectedly listed as
- Make sure your cluster is behind a , or your clients are configured to talk to multiple nodes. If your application communicates with only a single node, stopping that node to upgrade its CockroachDB binary will cause your application to fail.
- By default, the uses a compaction concurrency of 3. If you have sufficient IOPS and CPU headroom, you can consider increasing this setting via the
COCKROACH_COMPACTION_CONCURRENCYenvironment variable. This may help to reshape the LSM more quickly in scenarios; and it can lead to increased overall performance for some workloads. Cockroach Labs strongly recommends testing your workload against non-default values of this setting. - CockroachDB is designed with high fault tolerance. However, taking regular backups of your data is an operational best practice for planning. Refer to .
- Review the , as well as the release notes for any skipped major version. Pay careful attention to the sections for backward-incompatible changes, deprecations, changes to default cluster settings, and features that are not available until the upgrade is finalized.
- Optionally disable auto-finalization to preserve the ability to roll back a major-version upgrade instead of finalizing it. If auto-finalization is disabled, a major-version upgrade is not complete until it is finalized.
Ensure you have a valid license key
To perform major version upgrades, you must have . Patch version upgrades can be performed without a valid license key, with the following limitations:- The cluster will run without limitations for a specified grace period. During that time, alerts are displayed that the cluster needs a valid license key. For more information, refer to the .
- The cluster is at the end of the grace period if no before then.
- The cluster will run without limitations for a 7-day grace period. During that time, alerts are displayed that the cluster needs to send telemetry.
- The cluster is if telemetry is not received before the end of the grace period.
Perform a patch upgrade
-
Add a partition to the update strategy defined in the StatefulSet. Only the pods numbered greater than or equal to the partition value will be updated. For a cluster with 3 pods (e.g.,
cockroachdb-0,cockroachdb-1,cockroachdb-2) the partition value should be 2: -
Change the container image in the StatefulSet:
-
To check the status of the rolling upgrade, run
kubectl get pods. -
Verify that all pods have been upgraded:
You can also check the CockroachDB version of each node in the .
Roll back a patch upgrade
To roll back a patch upgrade, repeat the steps in Perform a patch upgrade, but configure the container image for the pods to the previous major version.Perform a major-version upgrade
To perform a major upgrade:-
- Add a partition to the update strategy defined in the StatefulSet. Only the pods numbered greater than or equal to the partition value will be updated. For a cluster with 3 pods (e.g.,
cockroachdb-0,cockroachdb-1,cockroachdb-2) the partition value should be 2:
- Add a partition to the update strategy defined in the StatefulSet. Only the pods numbered greater than or equal to the partition value will be updated. For a cluster with 3 pods (e.g.,
-
Change the container image in the StatefulSet:
-
To check the status of the rolling upgrade, run
kubectl get pods. -
After the pod has been restarted with the new image, start the CockroachDB :
-
Run the following SQL query to verify that the number of underreplicated ranges is zero:
This indicates that it is safe to proceed to the next pod.
-
Exit the SQL shell:
-
Decrement the partition value by 1 to allow the next pod in the cluster to update:
-
Repeat steps 4-8 until all pods have been restarted and are running the new image (the final partition value should be
0). -
Check the image of each pod to confirm that all have been upgraded:
You can also check the CockroachDB version of each node in the .
- If auto-finalization is disabled, the upgrade is not complete until you finalize the upgrade.
Finalize a major-version upgrade manually
To finalize a major-version upgrade:-
Connect to the cluster using the SQL shell:
-
Run the following command:
A series of migration jobs runs to enable certain types of features and changes in the new major version that cannot be rolled back. These include changes to system schemas, indexes, and descriptors, and enabling certain types of improvements and new features. Until the upgrade is finalized, these features and functions will not be available and the command
SHOW CLUSTER SETTING versionwill return the previous version`. You can monitor the process of the migration in the DB Console . Migration jobs have names in the format26.1-{migration-id}. If a migration job fails or stalls, Cockroach Labs can use the migration ID to help diagnose and troubleshoot the problem. Each major version has different migration jobs with different IDs. The amount of time required for finalization depends on the amount of data in the cluster, because finalization runs various internal maintenance and migration tasks. During this time, the cluster will experience a small amount of additional load. When all migration jobs have completed, the upgrade is complete. -
To confirm that finalization has completed, check the cluster version:
If the cluster continues to report that it is on the previous version, finalization has not completed. If auto-finalization is enabled but finalization has not completed, check for the existence of where decommission has stalled. In most cases, issuing the
decommissioncommand again resolves the issue. If you have trouble upgrading, contact Support.
Roll back a major-version upgrade
To roll back to the previous major version before an upgrade is finalized:-
Change the container image in the custom resource to use the previous major version:
-
Apply the new settings to the cluster:
The Operator will perform the staged rollback.
-
To check the status of the rollback, run
kubectl get pods. -
Verify that all pods have been rolled back:
Disable auto-finalization
By default, auto-finalization is enabled, and a major-version upgrade is finalized when all nodes have rejoined the cluster using the newcockroach binary. This means that by default, a major-version upgrade cannot be rolled back. Instead, you must .
To disable auto-finalization:
-
Connect to the cluster using the SQL shell:
-
Set the
cluster.auto_upgrade.enabledtofalse.
Previously, to disable automatic finalization and preserve the ability to roll back a major-version upgrade, it was required to set the cluster setting
cluster.preserve_downgrade_option to the cluster’s current major version before beginning the major-version upgrade, and then to unset the setting to finalize the upgrade.We now recommend managing a cluster’s finalization policy using the cluster setting cluster.auto_upgrade.enabled, which was introduced in v23.2. The setting does not need to be modified after it is initially set.Either of these settings prevents automatic finalization.Before you begin
If you , substitutekubectl with oc in the following commands.
All kubectl steps should be performed in the . By default, this is cockroach-operator-system.
Before beginning a major-version or patch upgrade:
- Verify the overall health of your cluster using the :
- Under Node Status, make sure all nodes that should be live are listed as such. If any nodes are unexpectedly listed as
SUSPECTorDEAD, identify why the nodes are offline and either restart them or them before beginning your upgrade. If there areDEADand non-decommissioned nodes in your cluster, the upgrade cannot be finalized. If any node is not fully decommissioned, try the following:- First, reissue the . The second command typically succeeds within a few minutes.
- If the second decommission command does not succeed, and then decommission it again. Before continuing the upgrade, the node must be marked as
decommissioned.
- Under Replication Status, make sure there are
0under-replicated and unavailable ranges. Otherwise, performing a rolling upgrade increases the risk that ranges will lose a majority of their replicas and cause cluster unavailability. Therefore, it’s important to identify and resolve the cause of range under-replication and/or unavailability before beginning your upgrade. - In the Node List, make sure all nodes are on the same version. Upgrade them to the cluster’s current version before continuing. If any nodes are behind, this also indicates that the previous major-version upgrade may not be finalized.
- In the Metrics dashboards, make sure , , and capacity are within acceptable values for each node. Nodes must be able to tolerate some increase in case the new version uses more resources for your workload. If any of these metrics is above healthy limits, consider to your cluster before beginning your upgrade.
- Under Node Status, make sure all nodes that should be live are listed as such. If any nodes are unexpectedly listed as
- Make sure your cluster is behind a , or your clients are configured to talk to multiple nodes. If your application communicates with only a single node, stopping that node to upgrade its CockroachDB binary will cause your application to fail.
- By default, the uses a compaction concurrency of 3. If you have sufficient IOPS and CPU headroom, you can consider increasing this setting via the
COCKROACH_COMPACTION_CONCURRENCYenvironment variable. This may help to reshape the LSM more quickly in scenarios; and it can lead to increased overall performance for some workloads. Cockroach Labs strongly recommends testing your workload against non-default values of this setting. - CockroachDB is designed with high fault tolerance. However, taking regular backups of your data is an operational best practice for planning. Refer to .
- Review the , as well as the release notes for any skipped major version. Pay careful attention to the sections for backward-incompatible changes, deprecations, changes to default cluster settings, and features that are not available until the upgrade is finalized.
- Optionally disable auto-finalization to preserve the ability to roll back a major-version upgrade instead of finalizing it. If auto-finalization is disabled, a major-version upgrade is not complete until it is finalized.
Ensure you have a valid license key
To perform major version upgrades, you must have . Patch version upgrades can be performed without a valid license key, with the following limitations:- The cluster will run without limitations for a specified grace period. During that time, alerts are displayed that the cluster needs a valid license key. For more information, refer to the .
- The cluster is at the end of the grace period if no before then.
- The cluster will run without limitations for a 7-day grace period. During that time, alerts are displayed that the cluster needs to send telemetry.
- The cluster is if telemetry is not received before the end of the grace period.
Perform a patch upgrade
-
Add a partition to the update strategy defined in the StatefulSet. Only the pods numbered greater than or equal to the partition value will be updated. For a cluster with 3 pods (e.g.,
cockroachdb-0,cockroachdb-1,cockroachdb-2) the partition value should be 2: -
Connect to the cluster using the SQL shell:
-
Remove the cluster initialization job from when the cluster was created:
-
Change the container image in the StatefulSet:
-
To check the status of the rolling upgrade, run
kubectl get pods. -
Verify that all pods have been upgraded:
You can also check the CockroachDB version of each node in the .
Roll back a patch upgrade
To roll back a patch upgrade, repeat the steps in Perform a patch upgrade, but configure the container image for the pods to the previous major version.Perform a major-version upgrade
To perform a major upgrade:-
Add a partition to the update strategy defined in the StatefulSet. Only the pods numbered greater than or equal to the partition value will be updated. For a cluster with 3 pods (e.g.,
cockroachdb-0,cockroachdb-1,cockroachdb-2) the partition value should be 2: -
Connect to the cluster using the SQL shell:
-
Remove the cluster initialization job from when the cluster was created:
-
Change the container image in the StatefulSet:
Ignore the pod for cluster initialization. It is re-created as a byproduct of the StatefulSet configuration but does not impact your existing cluster.
-
After the pod has been restarted with the new image, start the CockroachDB :
-
Run the following SQL query to verify that the number of underreplicated ranges is zero:
This indicates that it is safe to proceed to the next pod.
-
Exit the SQL shell:
-
Decrement the partition value by 1 to allow the next pod in the cluster to update:
-
Repeat steps 4-8 until all pods have been restarted and are running the new image (the final partition value should be
0). -
Check the image of each pod to confirm that all have been upgraded:
You can also check the CockroachDB version of each node in the .
- If auto-finalization is disabled, the upgrade is not complete until you finalize the upgrade.
Finalize a major-version upgrade manually
To finalize a major-version upgrade:-
Connect to the cluster using the SQL shell:
-
Run the following command:
A series of migration jobs runs to enable certain types of features and changes in the new major version that cannot be rolled back. These include changes to system schemas, indexes, and descriptors, and enabling certain types of improvements and new features. Until the upgrade is finalized, these features and functions will not be available and the command
SHOW CLUSTER SETTING versionwill return the previous version`. You can monitor the process of the migration in the DB Console . Migration jobs have names in the format26.1-{migration-id}. If a migration job fails or stalls, Cockroach Labs can use the migration ID to help diagnose and troubleshoot the problem. Each major version has different migration jobs with different IDs. The amount of time required for finalization depends on the amount of data in the cluster, because finalization runs various internal maintenance and migration tasks. During this time, the cluster will experience a small amount of additional load. When all migration jobs have completed, the upgrade is complete. -
To confirm that finalization has completed, check the cluster version:
If the cluster continues to report that it is on the previous version, finalization has not completed. If auto-finalization is enabled but finalization has not completed, check for the existence of where decommission has stalled. In most cases, issuing the
decommissioncommand again resolves the issue. If you have trouble upgrading, contact Support.
Roll back a major-version upgrade
To roll back to the previous major version before an upgrade is finalized:-
Change the container image in the custom resource to use the previous major version:
-
Apply the new settings to the cluster:
The Operator will perform the staged rollback.
-
To check the status of the rollback, run
kubectl get pods. -
Verify that all pods have been rolled back:
Disable auto-finalization
By default, auto-finalization is enabled, and a major-version upgrade is finalized when all nodes have rejoined the cluster using the newcockroach binary. This means that by default, a major-version upgrade cannot be rolled back. Instead, you must .
To disable auto-finalization:
-
Connect to the cluster using the SQL shell:
-
Set the
cluster.preserve_downgrade_optionto the cluster’s current major version. The Helm chart does not yet support thecluster.auto_upgrade.enabled.

