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Existing Instance Upgrades

Not availableCloud Not availableSelf-Managed Community (OSS)AvailableSelf-Managed Enterprise

This page supplements the Self-Managed Enterprise implementation guide. It highlights the steps to take if you are currently using Airbyte Self-Managed Community, our free open source offering, and are ready to upgrade to Airbyte Self-Managed Enterprise.

A valid license key is required to get started with Airbyte Enterprise. Talk to sales to receive your license key.

These instructions are for you if:

  • You want your Self-Managed Enterprise instance to inherit state from your existing deployment.
  • You are currently deploying Airbyte on Kubernetes.
  • You are comfortable with an in-place upgrade. This guide does not dual-write to a new Airbyte deployment.

Step 1: Update Airbyte Open Source

You must first update to the latest Open Source Community release. We assume you are running the following steps from the root of the airbytehq/airbyte-platform cloned repo.

  1. Determine your current helm release name by running helm list. This will now be referred to as [RELEASE_NAME] for the rest of this guide.
  2. Upgrade to the latest Open Source Community release. The output will now be refered to as [RELEASE_VERSION] for the rest of this guide:
helm upgrade [RELEASE_NAME] airbyte/airbyte

Step 2: Configure Self-Managed Enterprise

Update your values.yml file as explained in the Self-Managed Enterprise implementation guide. Avoid making any changes to your external database or log storage configuration at this time.

Step 3: Deploy Self-Managed Enterprise

  1. You can now run the following command to upgrade your instance to Self-Managed Enterprise. If you previously included additional values files on your existing deployment, be sure to add these here as well:
helm upgrade \
--namespace airbyte \
--values ./values.yaml \
--install [RELEASE_NAME] \
--version [RELEASE_VERSION] \
airbyte/airbyte
  1. Once this is complete, you will need to upgrade your ingress to include the new /auth path. The following is a skimmed down definition of an ingress resource you could use for Self-Managed Enterprise:
Configuring your Airbyte ingress
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: Ingress
metadata:
name: # ingress name, example: enterprise-demo
annotations:
ingress.kubernetes.io/ssl-redirect: "false"
spec:
ingressClassName: nginx
rules:
- host: # host, example: enterprise-demo.airbyte.com
http:
paths:
- backend:
service:
# format is ${RELEASE_NAME}-airbyte-webapp-svc
name: airbyte-enterprise-airbyte-webapp-svc
port:
number: 80 # service port, example: 8080
path: /
pathType: Prefix
- backend:
service:
# format is ${RELEASE_NAME}-airbyte-keycloak-svc
name: airbyte-enterprise-airbyte-keycloak-svc
port:
number: 8180
path: /auth
pathType: Prefix
- backend:
service:
# format is ${RELEASE_NAME}-airbyte--server-svc
name: airbyte-enterprise-airbyte-server-svc
port:
number: 8001
path: /api/public
pathType: Prefix

All set! When you log in, you should expect all connections, sources and destinations to be present, and configured as prior.